Newspapers / Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, … / Nov. 29, 1922, edition 1 / Page 7
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GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1921 IAGRAPH INSUIES $6,000,000 IAW SUIT Famous Plavers-Lasky Charged With Conspiracy to Control Picture Businees. NAME 12 INDIVIDUALS New York, Nov. 11 -The Vltagraph company sf America today began lult for ly.SM.OOO In tlx United States District court against th Famous f lejere-Lasky corporation and a doien Individuals, charging a eon- anfr.nv tn anntrnl th. tnntlnn nletnra Industry of the nation, The action was begun under a sec tion of the Sherman law which pro vides for the assessment of , triple damages when Interstate commerce Is Impeded. Th Vltagraph company allege that since 1919 the defendants have Inter fered with the business of oompetlng producers and distributors, and have established such control as to have cost the plaintiffs .2,0v0,000. Among the defendants named In the suit are Adolph Zukor, president of the Famous Players-Lasky corpora tion; Jesse L. I,asky: Jules Brulateor, one of the leading distributors; Dan iel Frohman and Cecil de Mtllt. The complaint describes the stares betwen the filming of'a picture and Its anal exhibition In the 14,000 lead in theaters of the UnltM States and Canada. All of these theaters, the complaint states are divided Into three ela.se. "first ran, eeoend run, and third run theatere. In each large olty, the complaint avers, there are what are known as "key" theaters, exhibition In which Is essential to the financial auoess of a picture, The Vltagraph company charges that the defendants, through oontrol of a large proportion of these "key" theatere, caused the profits of tne plaintiff to decrease from a previous average of I7S0.009 yearly to 10f,40 In 1911. The oapltal of the Vltagraph company Is put at 12,171,000. BRITT IS NOT WORRIED OVER SITUATION WHICH BOTHERS DRY LEADERS (Continued From l'age One) pTovlsioinsiiKLirT plained to the 'people that It will be defeated In the houee of Its re puted friends. Senator Overman eald today It was his understnadlng that a majority could be. marshalled most any time against the bill, whloh the President carried to Congress with a sort of ultimatum, and the vote on which Is to be regarded as the add test of White House Influenoe. The fate of the Republican party la bound upon this bill, soms think as it Is certain that ttk dsfeat would prove very humiliating to the President. A number of Democrats do not fear a vote for still another reaeon. They say It the Republicans can really muster a'majorlty, let them pass the bill, and If It as bad as most Demo crats say lb Is, ths country will hold the party In power responsible for subsequent events. Senator Overman has received a letter from J. Q. Jant, proprietor of Olenraven Cotton mills, enclosing letters from the Crosler-Pocahontas Coal company, of Bluefleld, W. Va., and from A H. Hawes, Richmond, Va., advising Mr. Gant that they could not I Th, Gift Box ' iijiH J BLENDsotfl...., WSmESmmi j A gift box that is a jVjJYjJ A CeaapLt. Assortment Of NORRIS CANDIES " Baa or Balk ED. NOWELL'S PHARMACY 1 Include the Motorist's Department Store On Your Shopping Tour This message is addressed to the ladies, who about this time are wondering what in the world to give the man. If that man owns a car, then we can tell you of many things that will Just suit him in the way of a Christmas remembrance. Most men are fussy about their cars, and anything that will improve its appearance, make it drive easier or that is handy for use around the car will make a hit with any car owner. In the Motorist's Department Store is a big list of such items; for example: Motor Robes Spot Lamps Rear View Mirror Aih Receivers Trouble Lamps I Hansen Glove MotoMeterw Step Plate! Closed Car Vaes Radiator Ornament You will find these in the accessory department. Many other articles, just as appropriate, are there too. Greensboro Motor Car Co. The Motorist' Department Store 315 W. Market t Phone 2500 Buick The Standard of Comparison All thslr contracts for eoal. Mr. Oant wrote that some of the coal shipped him had been confiscated by the Nor folk and Western Railway company. Senator Overman took the matter up with the federal fuel distributor, who writes htm that the president of the Norfolk and Western has gives as surance that the road will not again confiscate eoal In transit for ths oot- ton milts, except under the most ex treme emergenoy and the Crosler- Pocahontas oompany say they will ship a oar of coal to the Olenraven mills next week. Representative Abernethy, repre-i aentlng Senators Simmons as wsll as himself, went to ths navy department today to ask the reinstatement of Peter Hill, a machinist, who has been employed for II yeare In the navy, and ranks T per cent efficient. Mr. Hill wae. formerly a resident of New Bern, He has now a dependent family living In Washington. He was dis charged, a few weeks ago under the drastic order to cut down expenses In the navy department. He had worked himself up to be one of the most skill ful machinists In the servloe, but Mr. Abernethy war told there was no longer any place In the service for Hill. On the day he was dlschargsd hundreds of other naval employes, equally skillful, had to go. These workers are unfitted for other work and there Is soarcely a congressman whpBe office is not visited by these discharged government employes, many of them middle aged men, with large families, and nothing saved up. Postoffloe Inspectors have been di rected to make an investigation with a view to, the appointment of a post master at'Manchester. Walter Murphy, of Salisbury, Is In Washington on legal business. L. I Johnson, of Lumberton, Is hereto oonsult with Senator Overman with reference to some cases psnding In the United States veterans' bureau. R.D.TURNERISKILLED Henderson Man Fatally Injured When Private Lighting System Explodes. WAS WELL KNOWN MAN CAPE FEAR RIVER MAY BE DEEPENED Representative of District Engineer Hears statement of Men Interested. (bpkUi u Piilr tti Fayettevllle, Nov. !. Confidence that a very heavy volume of freight buslnees would be handled In the Cape Fear river with a irilnlraum depth of eight feet water assured was expressed by Capt. W. C. Manson, manager of the New York, Wilming ton, Fayettevllle Steamboat com pany at a hearing held here this afternoon before Capt. Oscar O. Kuents, of ths district engineer's office for the purpoee of ascertaining the extent of the need and commercial practicability of a third lock and dam In the Cape Fear. Captain Manson's statoment was perhaps the most slg nlflcant of .those made by a number of organisations and Individuals vitally Interested In the success of the move for a third lock. His com pany now Has a boat operating regu lady between Wilmington and Fay ettevllle and the manager declared that the business handled by the steamer had been good from the be ginning and Is Increasing constantly. A strong statement of the necessity of the new lock and dam to be built about It miles below Fayettevllle, and of the benefits to be derived from the resulting eight foot stage oS water was made by R. M. Horsburch secretary of the Fayettevllle chamber of commerce while papers along ths same line were submitted by the shipping committee of Wilmington chamber of commerce, the North Carolina-fisheries commission, and the port commission of Wilmington. . taprttt to Mill Nial Henderson, Nov. 28. -R. D. Turner, age fl, died about i o'olook Monday morning at the Sarah Elisabeth lios pltal, of this olty, from Injuries he sustained when the acetylene tank In the private lighting systsm at his home, three miles north or the olty. exploded Saturday talght The blast hurled Mr. Turner against the au'er wall of his house a dletance or some 20 fset, and boards and timbers loosed by the Impact of the explosion fell upon him as hs hit the ground. Mr, Turner was unconscious wherr members of the family reached him, and he never regained consciousness. Mr. Turner had gone out to his potato house Just before bedtime. shortly before 10 o'olook, to arrange a protection from the frost. He car ried a lantern In his hand, The theory of the family Is that as he was returning to the house, ns stop ped at the door of the outhouse whsre the lighting systsm, Inoludlng the acetylene tank, was housed, about 20 feet directly behind the kitchen. It la known the tank had been giving trouble, and It had been refilled with carbide on Saturday morning. It Is thought that gases escaping came In contact with the flame In the lantern the moment he opened the door, thus setting off the explosion. The lantern was Dlown into small pieces. Mr. Turner was rushed to tne nos- pital here, where It was found no bones were broken. It Is thought probabls he died of an Internal hem orrhage. Many of his friends viewed the scene Sunday ana Monday. Funeral services wsre held from the home Tuesday afternoon at 8 o'clock, the Rev. W. H. Neese and Rev. J. E. Prltchard being In charge. Mr. Turner was laid to rest In the family burying ground. For many years Mr. Turner was a member of the Spring Valley Methodist Protest ant church. News from Washington carried by the Associated Press gave the an nouncement yesterday that Vernon W. Farrls was nominated Monday by President Harding to be postmaster at Henderson. Mr. Farrls' nomination came as no surprise here, following the return last week of applications made by other applicants under the clyll serv ice rulee, letters accompanying these applications saying that Mr. Farrls had qualified for the place and his name had been certified to the poet office department at the department's request for a rating. Mr. Farrls has been In. the postal service here for about IS years. He entered the service In J907, and served for two years as stamp clerk was three years at the general de livery window and served later two years each as dispatching cieiK money order and registry clerk, and as night clerk In the local post- cfflce snd for the past four yeare has been carrying a rural route. He served on the civil service board for two years. Ilsh language and western oustoms. and continued the work until her departure last month for Amerloa, where she Is In be marrlet herself. Hsr sister, Miss IsaUelle Ingram, then took over the task uf, teaching the future empress. Recently his majesty dispatched elaborate wedding gifts to his fian cee. The procession wound from the north gate of the forbidden Olty to the home of the prlnoess' father, completely filling the streets through which K passed. Keoh gift was en cased In silk or lacquer or some other beautiful covering, while a Muck of shoep was sent that a feast might be prepared. The whole pro cession was guarded, by the police. The emperor Is of a type highly lespccUd throughout China the In tellectual. He Is about five feet eight Inches tall E IN AUTOMOBILE CRASH Troy Lawson, Aged 16, Dies From Effects of Eating Much Concentrated Lye. ODUM BEATS TOWNSEND (Sptrlsl to Dally Nm.) Lumberton, Nov. HI Eleven peo- nla Innludtnr mix children. Were slender and graceful with , ,htly Injured when two automobiles shapely hands, but the western oon oeptlon of exoesslvely long finger nails doee not hold good In his oaso, for they aro kept trimmed and mani cured much as are the nails of a gentleman In Philadelphia or Lon don. Ae has been reported and de nied in the west, his majesty has cut off bis queue. This was dons some time within the last It months. Hs now wears his Jet black looks In a pompadour. With his imperial marriage tne em peror is putting away nis onuaisu playthings. But hs win retain his army of toy soldiers. His majesty does not play with them as would an American boy, but uses them In working out military problems ana following campaigns. It Is not believed, however, that wis emperor cherlBhes the slightest de sire for a restoration of tha mon archy and his consequent return to power. He was too young when he abdicated to have had a taste of power. He still holds the respect of the Chinese people, and the terms of abdication are such that a very pleas ant life Is before him If he la only able to control his own future. The emperor retains his title and la guar anteed by the republlo the same re spect due any foreign soyerelgn and pension of $4,000,000 (silver) an nually. The boy emperor, who cares com paratively little for precedent, was anxious that the wedding ceremony be as simple as possible. The Funuchs and the officials who rule the Im perial household, however, looked at the matter differently, and the wed ding will present ons of the most gorgeous spsctacles ths world has seen In recent years. The pomp and glory are for the honor of the empire that has van ished"; the wedding Is for the happi ness of two young people. CLEMENCEAU PLEADS TO AMERICA TO SAVE HIS COUNTRY, FRANCE (Continued trom Page One-) authorities on that, and I have been told that that was a He. 1 did not know I wae lying, but If It Is neces sary I will bring my Informants, all honorable gentlemen, to bear witness, and we will then know who Is speak ing the truth. "I have written this down, and I will have the whole document printed. However, I want to read a few lines to you. This Is official: "One hundred and fifty cannon, the 105's: also 311 howttzere, enough to equip two army corps, have been dis covered by ths allied commission In Germany.. That la one fact that I quoted, and It was denied. Thirteen large field guns were unearthed January IS. 1922 and three thousand of the smaller field plscea have been uncovered and marked. "Multiply that by fifty and you have some Idea of what has been found In Germany by tha lnter-allled commission sine July, 1921. The Germans have been getting this large amount of armament, don't you think, for the purpose of destroying usf It certainly Is not for any peaceful operation. "Their finances have been depleted for the purpose of destroying us. They have not paid us, and we hava been unable to pay our own obliga tions. Go through tha schools of Germany and you will find that they are teaching hatred of the Frenoh. Oo to our schools and oolleges and universities and you will not find one man who would not consider It some thing undignified and not to the In terest of his own people to preach hatred toward Germany." WHEN ROYAL CHINESE' RIDE THE MATRIMONY SHIP, IT'S SOME RIDE (Continued from Page One:) REV. MR. AYRES WILL GO TO FOREST CITY Mrs. Battle Gibbet Dies and Is Buried at Lake Landing Other Items. rvi II BeS" I I l, i. i liis1f'TfiteV!f 1 m n II m e S20-S2d3M South Elm St. mummmt 'niiMhwmrMiiTi' WOM MILL3 CrtflgQT Tti YOU "i'"L7!r1KwiS'1?it'"w'' Greeashers). N. C. PROGRESSIVE LEADERS OPPOSE FORMATION OF A NEW POLITICAL BODY (Continued from Page One. In the senate. The calling of the Washington conference by LaFollette personally Inatesd of through tha committee of political action has caused It to be regarded as "LaFol lctte's conference." with the result that he Is put forward as the leader of the progressive movement In Congress. There Is a good deal of Jealousy among the prima donnas of liberalism in the senate. The last thing which Senator, Borah and Senator Johnson and perhaps some others wish to ac knowledge Is the leadership of LaFol lette. That much has been made clear by LaFollette calling the Washing ton conference In the way he did. DO LITTLE THINGS TIRE YOU OUT? ARE you "all run down", weak and languid and thin In flesh from rummer heat and fall colds I la your appetite gone, your nerves on tdgs, your digestion poor? You need Gude's Pepto-Mangan. It renews ths supply o( rich, red blood, brings back the tost -energy and anima tion, tones up your nervous system and helps to build firm, solid, healthy flesh and strong muscles. Your druggist has Gude's liquid or tablets, as you prefer. Gude's Pepto-Mangan Tonic and Blood Enricher when the princess steps out her face la still concealed from him. Attended by children of high birth, they pass together down the avenue of cedars and enter one of "the pal- acea, where he presents the princess with the Imperial wedding dress, which has been worn by many em presses before the princess. It Is not of any fabric but consists en tirely of ropes of diamonds, pearls and mother-of-pearl, held together by the most delicate silken threads. On Saturday night tha feasting will begin and will continue indefinitely. In the meantime the first concubine, whom the emperor Is taking simul taneously with his wife, will have entered the palace and taken up her abode with comparatively little cere mony. His majesty Is taking only one concubine at this time, although the house law of the Chlng dynas ty permits 70. Nerel Way of CkooalBg. H Is true, as wss reported last spring, that the boy emperor chose his own wife, going over the photo graphs of the Manohu princesses eligible for his hand and selecting the one for which be cared the most. It Is rumored that following her se lection the Princess Kuo Chlk-Si, In company with other Mancau maldena of high birth, walked through a court yard of the Forbidden City while the boy emperor looked out on her from behind drawn curtains. It Is more likely, however, that his majes ty will aotuafly see the face of his bride for the first time on the morn Ing that she Is borne Into his palace home which constitutes the real car emony of marriage. The princess Is mora beautiful than most of the maidens of China, and since she Is a Manohu she docs not bind her feet, which are naturally quite small. Also, since she Is Jlan chu, shs uses paint quite frankly. The princess has long hair, reaching below her knees, of the Jet black so prised In the far east. Her eyes are very long and dark, with heavy laehes, but they do not slant upward with the exaggerated angle so often seen In pictures of Chinese In America, Recently the, princess gave a fare well tea to five young friends of hers, themselves princesses of Msnchu blood. She Is especially fond of a flagrant tea that comes from the Tangtse valley and costs about 125 a pound. Another favorite of hers Is a cake made of the petals of roses and wisteria Inclosed In a casing of dough. As ths cake bakes the sweets Inside cook Into a jam. It Is stamped with the Beat of the emperor and then placed before the prlncesa Western sweets hsve their appeal to her pal ate also, for Miss Miriam Ingram has taught her to make fudge and ton dat Just as they are made In the kitchen of any American home. Since his abdication In 1913, the boy emperor has lived within the moated walls of ths Forbidden City. Ul. ,l,IA.,l,.n ha. rrnn nn an Wn to . tiahmati hrlng called In to tutor htm I jftj i. ..!(... i i., ....... i as III HS'l.l lt,i in Tin r aj n. The young prlncpNs was anxious to learn Kngllah, whloh Is eonnldered by most Chinese ns second only to the supreme language of the world, the Chinese. Several Manchus fit Impe rial blood have at various times been patients In the Peking I'nlon Medical oollege, which is on the Rockefeller foundation, and thoy know the assis tant dietitian there, Miss, Miriam Ing ram, and her father, Dr. J. H. Ing ram, of Philadelphia, who has been a medlca missionary In China for the last 85 years and Is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Ingram has been called Into the Im perial palace In the past In case of Illness, and he speaks and reads Chin ese, as do his daughters. Miss Miriam Ingram was engnged to teach tha young princess tha ISng- (8plil ta Dulr Xrm.) New Bern, Nov. 28. Rev. W. A. Ayers, pastor of first Baptist church, has resigned and will go to Forest City, where he has accepted the pas torate of the Baptist church. Mr. Ayers will leave New Bern January 1. He le serving his second term here, having come here eight years ago. During his stay he became uuite popular not only In his church but among New Bern people general ly. He was only recently elected to the Kotary club. News reached here yesterday of the death and burial of Mrs. Battle Qlbbs at Lake Landing. The de ceased was the mother of Br. N. al. Glbbs, member of the famous univer sity football team of 1892. of this city. Mrs. Glbbs was 71 years old and one of Hyde county's best known women. In addition to her son. she is survived by a daughter, Mrs. J. D. Hathway, of Elisabeth City. Itev. J. L. Hodges, pastor of Tab ernacle Baptist church, and Choris ter Mullln, of Georgia, have gone to Swannsboro for a two weeks' revlv-, al. Mr. Hodgos and his song leader have Just completed a series of meetings here. Advice has been received hers of the marriage In New York of (Jray MacW. Brysn, a grandson of Col. James A. Bryan, of this city, and Miss Gretehen Schoen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schoen. Mr. Bry an was graduated from Prlnoeton In 1912 and served nversess as a cap tain of artillery with the 77th division. collided on North Rim street, Lum berton, Sunday afternoon. Five of the six ohlldren reoelved Injuries that neoessttatsd their going to a looal hospital, though they were all able to return home today. One of the cars, a Ford, was drlvan by, John D. McMillan, negro, of Hoke county, while the other, a Dodge tournlng oar was driven by Ab Small, of Fairmont Both oars were badly damaged. Small was placed under arrest soon after the aootdent and later released under a 1500 bond, Troy Lawson, Jr., lt-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Troy Lawson, of Orrum, Robeson county, died Sunday at noon from the effects of swallow ing some lye Saturday at noon. The ohlld got hold of the lye when It was left sitting on the back steps at the Lawson home. Interment was made In tha family cemetery today at 10 a. m. Ernest Odum, Republican candi date for township road supervisor In Raft Swamp township, was elected over Josspb Townsend, Democratic candidate for tha same office In a special eleotlon Saturday. Odum re ceived 89 votes, while Townsend re ceived only 94. In the general elec tion both candidates reoelved the same vote II and the second elec tion was called by the county elec tion board. Tha eleotlon Saturday will be contested, It Is said, on the grounds that soma men who lived In another township votsd for Odum, who Is the only Republican elected to office" In Robeson county this year. A large number of farmers, rep resenting all parts of Robeson coun ty, attended a special hog meeting In Lumberton today. The meeting was held under the auspices of the Robeson county board of agriculture composed of one member from each of ths 36 townships In tha county. Tha meeting was addressed by W. W. Shay, state swine specialist. Mr. Shay outlined ths beat known methods for growing hogs for the commercial market. Ha was listened to with keen In ter est by the farmers, many of whom have already begun to ralee hogs for market. Robeson county will ship several carloads of hogs next March and Indications are that by March, 192S, shipping hogs In car lots will be a common thing for the farmers of the county. Joseph J. Roach, vice-president of the Southern Packing corporation, spent the day In Lumberton. This corporation has already established several packing plants In the south and Mr. Roach stated that he would pay to Robeson farmers the top mar ket for all the hogs they could grow. His company Is now operating a pack ing plant In Wilmington. He expects to send a buyer to tha shipping points in RoDeeon tor the purpoee of pur chasing ths hogs before they are shipped, he said. Thanksgiving Specials In GROCERIES Gardners Fruit Cake, lb ... . 80c Dromedary Dates, OO. Currants, nC psckag packaga Lf. Fig Pudding, AZC RaWns, OA. Hslni t package fcWC Plum Pudding, or". Candied Pineapple, R(in Lobby's sJeJU pound -UUl. Cranberries, OA. Glaee Cherries, OO. wet quart iVl. package Fresh Cocoanuts, Ifl. Crystallised Gingsw, OO each WC package aialt Largs Grapefruit, . 1A. Shelled Pecans, QOJ. each ,. lWC in glass Fresh Braxil and walnuts, OP Iceberg Lettuce, OAs pound .t WC head aiUC Florida Sweet Oranges, JA. Jumbo Celery, 1 C. dozen bunch 13 C Citron Peel, 60 C Fny Wlne"p --PP18' (JQ Orange Peel, Aft California Grapes, 9ae pound iwC pound wC WOMAN'S COMPLEX LIFE Woman's complex life with Its multltudlous calls Is glvsn as the reason for many a nervous brsak down. Home work, social obligations, dressmaking and the car. of chil dren keep the 20th century woman In a whirlwind of activity until head aches develop, backache, nervous ness and oftentimes more ssrlous Ills which are peculiar to her sex alone. Such women should not despair, hut be guided by the letters so often published In this paper from women who have been In Just such condl lions, but who have been restored to health by Lydla B. Plnkham'a Vege table Compound. This is a root and horb medicine that contains no drugs and can be taken In ssfety by any woman. Chrysanthemums All Celepe All Pries Summit Ave. Greenhouses Percy, aear ".remit A venae Pkae S4 More than tS, 400,090 women In the United States are employed In housa- keeplng. HS Lift Off with Fingers mil Poesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little "Freesone" en an aching corn, In stantly that oorn stops hurting, then shortly you lift It right oft with fing ers. Trulyl Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freesone for a few cents, sufficient to remove sv.ry hard oorn. soft corn, or oorn between the toes, and the eallusss, without soreness or Irrlta tton. tmmw:mmmmmmwmmmmmmmjmmm.mmMimam p S Afternoon Frocks and Evening of Velvet Colors are Black, " Rose Red and Navy. Exceptional Values at $47.50 and $55.00 I fcabaniss The Scientifically Built Watch Waltham Opera Witch Cat. No. Special it jewtmovtrrmH Adjusted to temperature and petition Cuihion ahape uKcaaa. Prtcaluo-oo I'm Going to Buy a Watch WHAT WATCH 1 Arc you going to buy a Weitch or the watch? Watches vary like characters. Here is the watch. Seventy years of watchmaking skill and leadership built into It. Dependable like an old friend. Lasting accurate and a watch to be proud of. The famous Waltham Opera Watch, 1 7 jewel move ment, adjusted to temperature and positions, in a truly beautiful case. What more can a man want in a watch? Ask your Jeweler to show you this masterpiece. He knows Waltham Watches. Vriltfor a ealuabU bookUt that U a llbiral" Watch" tducation Stntjtu upon rtquul. Th Waltham Watch Company Cructnt Strut. Waltham, Matt. WALTHAM THE WORLD'S WATCH OVER. TIMB SVWet ymmmttkktitm Wr " Wtlllfm Wttcha Mmktrt slu fanuus Valtkam alr-frlalon euaOy tmUmtUrt and AulomobiU Ttm-put4t uud on tht werLdt Uoding cart GIFTS THAT LAST Waltham Watches Mean Cmwee Ttssa Always We carry a full alook In both ladle and gentlemen's wrist ar pooka) watch .s. Greensboro Jewelry and Optical Co. feb Theater BalUlw SBBBMS 111 1 "OUbeaeBSBSMSSBBBBBB Waltham Watches MndH for man, women and young folk. Wo aland be hind vry wfttob wo aell. R. C. Bernau Taa lwalr Waltham Watches A big showing here. A Waltham to fit every re quirement, and a stock large enough to give you liberal range of selection for style or price. Stadiem Sales Stores 328 S. Elm SL JsVJsUasa iMiiiB sMiiB 1 Waltham Are Leaders Watches UlaltaetlT. aa.se l. W. F. HAYWORTH "The I.Ktle Stere Around th. C.rasr
Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 29, 1922, edition 1
7
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