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The Alamance Gleaner f VOL. LIV. - GRAHAM, N, C., THURSDAY DECEMBER 27, 1928. NO. 47. HAPPENNINGS OF THE WEEK ? ? ; ' ? ' ^I NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVENTS Varied Efforts to Prevent War Between Bolivia and Paraguay. By EDWARD W. PICKARD WAR between Bolivia and Para guay seemed probable last week nntll near the close of tlie period, when It was reported that the Bolivian government might consent to arbitrate the quarrel. Both nations claim the Qran Chaco region and the present trouble was precipitated by a clash be tween their border troops. The Bo livians considered, and still consider, that their nntional honor was grossly Insulted and they have been eagerly clamoring for hostilities. The, govern ment resigned so that a new^one, com posed of the leaders of all parties, could be formed; the general stafT called to the colors the class of 1029; defense committees were formed, and men. women and children In the cities paraded with flags and shouts for war. President Siles told his people that he did not wish war and would do all he could to avoid It, but that If Bolivians were forced to go to war to defend their national honor, he would go with them. Paraguay, which would not be able *ong to carry on warfare, was taking What steps she could to face the situ ation. A non-partisan board of na tional defense was formed and Presi dent Gugglarl called on all the po litical chiefs for collaboration. Meanwhile various agencies were try ing earnestly to avert the threatened hostilities. The council of the I-eague of Nations, to which Paraguay had ap pealed, urged that the quarrel be settled peaceably; and In Washington the international conference of Ameri can states on conciliation and arbitra tion, which began Its sessions Mon day, Immediately took up the matter, pleading with the two belligerent re publics to arrange their differences "pacifically and In a spirit of justice, concord, and of fraternity." Argen tina and Chile both offered their serv ices In arbitrating the dispute. At first the Bolivian delegation In the Pan American conference, headed by Dies de Medina, minister to Washington, announced U had been Instructed to take no part in the sessions until the trouble with Paraguay had been settled; but on Wednesday, after Sec retary of State Kellogg had communl cated with the government at La Pas, the Bolivians were told to resume their seats. This was taken as an indica tion that general warfare between the two republics would be averted. Mr Kellogg, as chairman of the confer ence, named a conciliation committee of Ave, the United States helng repre sented by Charles Evans Hughes, and the gathering of data on the conflict began at once. Traveling 6,450 miles from the African Jungle to Ixndon In nine day* and twelve hour*, the prince of Wales reached the bedside of his sick father Tuesday night and from the moment of their meeting the condition of King George seemed to grow better. The danger of the monarch's death did not pass entirely, however, and the British people and all the world con tinued to watch the bulletins with anxiety. The king's physic lulls. Im mediately after the arrival of the prince of Wales, pepared to take the more radical measures they believed necessary to save the king's life, and on Wednesday they performed two op erations to remove the purulent fluid at the base of the right lung. The bulletins of the doctors said the op erations were successful and that the condition of the king was satisfac tory. The fact trfat the king was strong enough to undergo the opera tions gave Increased hope of his ulti mate recovery. HERBERT HOOVER'S Latin Amer lean tour may yet be enlivened by some exciting incidents, though the authorities of the countries he visits are so alert that this seems Improb able. Last seek. Just before the President-Elect started on the railway Journey across the Andes, the police of Ituenos Aires, Argentina, uncovered _ a plot of an&achtsts to blow op Mr. Hoover's train in the outskirts of the city. Raiding a house, the police seized dynamite bombs, hand grenades, pistols and ammunition and arrested two young men. In the house was - found a detailed map of the railway system, (jfne of the prisoners was said to have made a full confession of the plot to destroy the Hoover special train. Mr. Hoover's two days' visit In Chile was pleasant and colorful. Though he had cabled a request for simplicity, his reception in Santiago was most elaborate. President Carlos Ibanez, the dictator of the republic, met him dressed in a general's uniform and the parade through the streets was a grand military display. The chief guests rode in carriages drawn by four horses, with gorgeous outriders and footmen. At a banquet given by the government Mr. Hoover announced his policy for the encouragement of gov ernment and private loans in Latin America for reproductive works only, such as public works and transporta tion. When the receptions and. sight seeing were over the Hoover party started across Mie Andes to Argen tina on a special train, making brief stops at many little towns. Ruenos Aires was reached late Thursday afternoon and President Irigoyen was on hand to receive the guests. The usual round of ceremonial affairs fol lowed. Sunday morning Mr. Hoover and his party went on an Ar gentine warship to Montevideo, Uru guay, where the U. S. S. Utah met them to convey them to Rio de Janeiro. Lieut, col. u. s. grant, third, U. S. A., has been given charge of all the arrangements for the Inaugu ration of Hoover on March 4. and Maj. Gen. Charles P. Summerall, chief of staff, has accepted the post of grand marshal for the occasion and will manage the parade. This api?oint ment follows precedent. The Presi dent-Elect has asked that' the cere mony be as simple as possible. SIX weeks of negotiations, culmi nating in a conference of Sir Aus ten Chamberlain, Aristide Briand and Gustav Stresemnnn in Lugano, re sulted in an agreement of the allies and Germany that the committee of experts should assemble in Paris about the end of December and finally fix the total amount of reparations Germany must pay and the method of payment. France, however, stipu lates that the decisions of the experts "are not necessarily binding on the governments," so it Is not certain that the great problem will he definitely solved. It Is specified that the Ameri can experts "have no official mandate and shall be merely American citizens chosen for their competence by the reparations commission." Germany : carried its contention that the repa rations parley be absolutely Independ ent of considerations either of the Rhineland evacuation or of the war debts of the allies. ^ ? > RUMANIA held Its first free par liamentary election Wednesday and It passed ofT quietly throughout the kingdom. As had been predicted, the Peasant party headed by Premier Jdliu Maniu scored an overwhelming victory. On Incomplete returns the minister of the Inferior estimated that the Peasants had got a full 85 per cent of all the ballots cast. Some 8 or 10 per cent went to the t.lheruls headed by Bratlano and the remainder to the Hungarian minority It ap pears that the two extremist groups, the Anti-Semites and the Communists, will not have a single seat out of .176 seats. Manlu himself, though an Al banian. chose to stand for election In Bucharest and received 65 per cent of the vote there. IN THE fiftieth anniversary edition of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch ap peared an article written by President Coolldge telling of the demands on the time of the President and suggesting that the government provide a country WhiteHouae. a modest place in the hills, near Washington to which the Chief Executive might go for brief periods of rest. The Idea was seized upon by Representative C. A. Woodrnm, Demo crat. of Virginia, and he Introduced a resolution for the establishment of a temporary White House In Virginia. The measure he offered directs the public buildings commission?a Joint I " I commission of the house and senate? to select a tentative site and report as soon as practicable the approxi mate cost of erecting a suitable man sion. BOULDER dam was the subject of protracted debate in tbe senate and a lot of log rolling, and finally California and Arizona reached a compromise on tbe diversion of. water from the Colorado river. The bill was amended so that California's allotment shall be 4,400,000 acre feet annu ally out of 7,500,000 acre feet assigned to California, Arizona and Nevada. Senators Ashurst and IJayden of Ari zona abandoned their filibuster and It appeared likely that the measure, with further amendments, would be adopted by the senate. To avert a threatened filibuster in the house the leaders of that body promised that a congressional reap portionment bill would be brought to the floor soon after the holiday recess. The census committee, under pressure, reported favorably a pending measure which proposes a redistribution of seats in the house on the basis of the 1030 census. HOOVltR'S proposed farm relief plan now has the support of the American Farm Bureau federation. Frank O. Low den, in a letter rend at the federation's closing session in Chi cago, urged the furmers to support the legislative proposal of the President Elect, and a resolution to that effect was adopted. The federation an nounced that at the beginning of the new year a nation-wide co-operative marketing service would he instituted by It. Through this department live stock, grain, and other markets will be analyzed to serve the commercial interests of 30,000.000 farmers. Frank Evans, the federation's general coun sel and head of its marketing depart ment, explained that two years bad been spent In preparing for the oper ation of the service department. 1"\ KLKGATES from forty nations, U some of them distinguished avi ators, held a three-<Jay Internationaf Civil Aeronautics conference in Wash ington, invited thereto by President C^colidge. The time was chosen as the twenty-fifth anniversary of the first heavier than air flight of the Wright brothers, and Orville Wright was pres ent as a member of the American dele gation and also as tbe guest of honor of the conference. Mr. Coolldge In Ids speech of welcome spoke of the pres ent and future of the aeronautic science and industry, and Assistant Secretary of Commerce MncOracken, who presided, reviewed the history of aviution and told of its progress in America. CI(. O. M., otherwise the Mexican ? Federation of Labor, which has been a power in the government of our neighbor republic for years and stirred up much of the trouble with the United States, is crumbling in ruin. As a political'party It has been black listed by the Obregonlstas and its own ranks are split wide open. State gov ernors that support It ore to be boy cotted. Many of the unions, led by the union of newspaper editors and re porters of the federal district, have seceded from the federation. MICHIGAN has 'another of those life imprisonment cases that stir up the foes of prohibition?and a great many other people. This time it is a woman, the mother of ten children, who was found guilty in Lansing of a fourth violation of the liquor law It is possible the woman. Mrs. Etta Mae Miller, may escape the life sentence through appeal to the Supreme court. INFLUENZA became epidemic over a large port of the country and fed eral and local health organizations worked hard to combat it A number } of colleges and schools were closed ! until after the holidays. The epidemic started on the Pacific coast and swept eastward. Fortunately the cases are milder than in 1918. the proportion of deaths being much smaller. JAMES A. PATTEN, Chicago finan cler and philanthropist, formerly known as the "wheaf king." died In his suburban home at the age of sevenry sIjl He had acquired great riches but had expended vast sums for the benefit of mankind, so he wss sincere I ly mourned. Heat Is Big Factor in Cooling Process The popular ld?a thai mechanical refrigeration put* cold Into the Ice box U sclent Ideally wrong. The story of refrigeration was given to the New York Electrical society by Stephen Remits of New York, a power engineer. Refrigeration by gas. lie said. <!?es not appear to do a thing except put heat Into an Icebox, because It op erates by a gas flame. What actually happen* was explained a* the boiling <>f something nnly a little hit hot, to get out of It aomethlng extremely cold. The (tuff boiled la ninmottlx and hydrogen, and It boils at mild beat because It Is In a vacuum. The boll Ing releases ammonia, which rushes through the refrigerator colls so fast as to produce Ice, on the well known principle that evaporation makes cold. Meanwhile the mildly hot hytboget lias flowed out of the icebos In a pipe, to be cooled by running tap wa ter. When cooled It can be reunited with the ammonia to form a liquid again ready for the gas flame. The little stream of tap water. Hen nls said, which makes It possible to reunite the two gases. Is the real agency that steals the heat out of the Icebox. > In refrigeration by electricity a dlf ferent system Is used to steal away the beat. The used cooling gases are liquefied again by a 'Compressor which Is actually the beat ramorei for the system ? | A Popular Greeting j I a HAI'I'Y New Year to joul I | l~\ Where In the poetry of titer- j I lala ran he found word* more j ! musical to the ear. a anlutatlon j I more thrilling In Its promise? j ! The colors of the ralnhow are j f In It. It Is a greeting that com- j t hlnes the divine and the human j | Into a symbolic hope that never j I dies. The primal virtues of man I j kind- -the fnlth that looks he ] i yon-' the clouds of douht. the J ' hopes that no misfortunes rnn j I stlde. the charities that "heal I i and soothe and bless"?all are j ; f crystallised In the phrase. ' i3UtiXMMUN>liMSISWMMUUUUUU>9^ ] Putting | "HAPP1J" I JHappq Mew I] earl | Bj L. B. LYONS } I <3Yp3j]| kON E Id ? great city od [|?W?|| New Year's eve made Greg-. |i otj Hughes a mighty lonely IfirnKwl ln,"vl(luul- Money, he had |aJi?igji|| but that couldn't buy hint honest-to-goodness friends. The evening was young yel so he decided to at least hunt up a good show, hut even there he knew he would Bnd no one he knew. Gregory went Into the wardrobe to search out a sun be hud not worn for some time when suddenly he ran acniss several cos tumes he had used during his college days when he bad played the bjnek face comedian parts In a fraternity minstrel show. He searched shout In the pockets of one of the outfits and there he found pieces of burnt cork and then something still more familiar ?his good old harmonica. "Greg." as his friends had called him, hud been a whii with the har monica and his solo dance acts, and be sat^down on the end of an op rned steamer trunk whllr he re mlnlsred over those good old-days. "By George. I I can't yet a laugh out of life somehow," he thought to himself, "why not give some one else a good laugh and It will do me gmal too." and he was Immediately Into action. He phoned the Charity hospl r-v ran H? Bsgan Dressing in HI* Fantastic Costume. tal and was informed that there were four hundred and alxty paileula there who would get a great kick out of Ills little act. Next he phoned the FIfty-flrst street prison and there he found aotue linn dred and tlftv souls that could stand ? lot of New Tear's ere cheering up Then he phoned the Soldiers Orphans Home and there, too. he found a host more that needed such diversion as he could furnish them. Gregory Hughes ?as not conceited but he knew he could put on the whole show, for hndn'l he srmiu pllshed that very thing mnny lime* before and yet?he still wanted to share the entertainment part of the Joy with some one else and this was one thing that money could buy. The next and lasi phone call was to a nearby emph yment agency. He of fered unheard of wages to. a young woman who conld play any sheet of music put before her He offered a like salary to a "one-man hand:" with these two capnhles on their way In a taxi to him. he began dressing In his fantastic costume. The lomatgs of the prison, the hos pltal and the orphanage had never he fore. nor since, known such a happv New Tear'a eve as these three young persons had furnished them. Of all the Ibt. Gregory Hughes had been the happiest. His little pianist, klury Bar hare Stone, waa the next happiest for ?he. like Gregory, hsd am a true friend In the great rlty. but she be lleved site hsd Just found oge The one-tnnn hand departed Im mediately after receiving bla fee for the evening's work, hut not so with I NewYear's j I Breaks 8 By Anna L. Newsom C tfBK?SIKW and bo party." allied Juue a* (sPcws) *'"* ?lePos,,e<J ber ^ew r|i?9? Yeur'a dinner on the only chair In her kitch enette. "At borne there'll be watch parties, *n' every thing; but It takes money to ride truins, and walking's not so good with high-heeled puuips." She put her perishables on the win dow ledge and fixed her simple sup per and was very lonely. It was her tlrst New Year's away from home, and the crowds made her loneliness more poignant. For, beyond the girls at a nnne-too-llvely real estate office and the landlady, aha bad no acquaint ances. "Why Isn't there some way for girls In the city to get acquainted with oth er girls?and boys?" Jane asked her self. She made a plate of fudge, did the dishes, washed her glorious bmwn hair, bathed and found It to be exact ly ten minutes after eight, when sbe wished It were midnight. Then she dressed?In her prettiest afternoon dress of black satin with Just enough yellow to mnke It Interesting. "All fixed up. and no place to go," she cried cynically. And at that moment sbe heard voices across the hall: "t'ome right In?where's Nell? Hap py New Year, yourself." "Nell's moth er Is worse, so Nell had to stay with her." "Oh, dear, poor thing?and poor me. tool We can't play bridge?can't dance or anything." "Never mind, we'll have a good time anyway." And the voices were shut away from Jane by two doors. Jane chuckled, put on ber coat, pulled her little black hat over ber hair, and tiptoed out of her mom. She walked around the block twice, returned, fumbled noisily at her lock, gave a vigorous tug oo her string of Imitation pearls The heads fell?half of them rolling under the door across the hall from her door. A gentle knock, a pardon asked, the beads secured. Introductions made, and an Invitation to dance followed quickly. Some one remarked that broken heads were easier mended than brok en resolutions For hours Jane had * delightful time and helfied make the party a suc cess Then when the New Year had been duly ushered In, Charlie Sunn ders stup|>ed with Jane at her door. "And here nre your heads" he said. "Won't you need some help In string Ing them?about tomorrow nightV "Yes I'll need help: but I warn you that they are harder to string than the string is to break." "I'm oscd to bard tasks?I'll be here at eight." "Rood-night." "Rood-night." I?. ISM Wftirrtt Nvwvrspvr Psion > "Mary BnrhorH." as Greg kept calling tier to hlnmelf. He would not permit her to go home alone. Hie entertainment hahll grew oo the pair during the following year anil almost every Sunday they found aotne new place where they might enttrtnln to make Home one elae happy. II wna New Year's ere again and Greg had called for Mary Rarhura at her home at the Bock hotel. "Who are we going to cheer up thla eve ning. Greg?" alie aaked. "You remem tier laat New Vear'a eve waa the llrat time I met you"?and ahe iieered ahy ly at hla countenance hut he gave no algna of having heard. A few mlnulea later Greg atopped till ear before the little Church Around the Corner. "Why. Greg, we can't do our atunta here!" Mary exclaimed "Can't we? Well, my dear, for once I am going to aak for aotne of the liupplneaa myaelf. It la up to yon honey girt. to make me happy hy say Ing "Yel." Will yon? The preacher la ?vailing. Mary Barhnrn?what la yout anawer?" It la oeedleaa to record that Mary Barbara rained her llpe to Greg hi ahe ?vhl?|iered "Yea. Greg dear but It lan't only making you happy for I've tieen mighty unhappy alnre laat New Vear'a eve trying to gel yon to pro poae. hnt I had ahotu given up hope.' "Yon little Happy New Year, yon.' he Whlapered aa ha led her Mown the altde of the beautiful old chapel. >111 Waatera Nmompo Union * Watching the New Year In Nearly every-me wtahea fo begin the yent right hy watching Hie old tear nul and ihe new one In and a watch party will atrike the right note aa It will adapt ttaelf to the need* ol a small or a large party. ~:u Mud Watch Tower* in Mekong Valley. (Prepared by the National Oborraphi* 8octety. Waabinaton. D C> WIIKItE Id all (be world la to be found scenery ct.m|iaralile to Unit which awaits the ex plorer and photographer In northwestern Yunnan province. I'lilnn and In the mo.imuln fastnesses of Tsarung, In southeastern TllielT Few have been privileged to clliiih the tov/erlng ranges separating ilie mightiest streams ol Chins. If not ol Asia. The 'tlole region, so geologists tell us. wus once one vast, high pla teau. now intersected and eroded hy some of the longest rivers In the world. These rivers changed this high pla teau nut merely Into a land of lofty mountains, hut of deep valleys with gloomy shadows and forbidding gorges never trodden by human foot.' In these (tenches the Salwln. Me kong. and Yangtze, rutting through mountain ranges IAI.OCO feet In height, make their tray to the oceans. These three rivers, flowing parallel, north to south, for some distance in western China and southeastern Tibet, at one place come within 48 mites of each other, as the crow flies, and yet their mouths are separated by thonsamls of miles. It was this region Into which the National Geographic society recently sent Its Yunnan provlnre expedition under the leadership of Joseph F. Rock. No white mnn had previously nan a glimpse of many of the scenes photographed by the ^expedition. for the few explorers who have penetrat ed these terrifying fnstnessea have done so when the snow-capped peaks were hidden from view by the en velnplng monsoon clouds of summer The Salwln. which (lows for a long distance through Tlhet proper, enters Yunnan south of Tibet. In Its south ward course It becomes purt of the Burm Siamese borders and flnulty en ters the Indian ocean at Uoulmeln. made famous by one of Kipling's poems The Mekong parallels the Salwln to about the twentieth degree of latitude: then turns westward, forming the hor der of three countries?Burma. Slam, and Indo-Chlnn ? and finally enters the tropical South China sea near Saigon. Twists of the Yangtze. The Yangtze, the mightiest and longest of them all. Is also (Jie least consistent. It flows pursue? to the Mekong to a point near Shlku, and thence mukei a sharp curve, turning directly north; describes a nuge loop which udds hundreds of tulles to the length of the river; returns to the south, then turns to the east, becom Ing In part a boundary for the prov Inces of Yunnan and Szecliwnn. and at length bernls to the northnus' and en ters the Pacific ocean near Shanghai Of these rivers, the Sulwln Is the least known. It la navigable (or only n short distance above Its moutb. The Yangtze, on the other hand. Is navlg able for a distance of some I.9UU miles to Chungking, and thence by small boats as far as Sulfu. Beyond that rowboats ply as far as Macliang. In eastern Yunnan, lu the north, near liatung. It Is navigable by skin boats or coracles, hut only for short dls tances. Extensive stretches of this river, which Is more than 3.0UO miles long, are unknown and parts of Its course uppear on accurate maps as dotted lines. Much has been written about the Yangtze gorges In the vicinity of Ichang. so will known to tourists but very little has been said about the much grander gorges north of Llklang. Few have penetrated even pan way Into this most terrific of all canyons, among the first being J. Bacot and Doctor Handel-Mazettl. who ventured as far as the hamlet of DJIpalo, while Bock continued the Journey to near Tako. That long stretch of the eastern most arm of the great loop, from Ftutgkou to Talllklung. has also been unexplored, especially south of l-apn This the National Geographic society expedition followed nearly all the way. bringing bark the first pbotograplu of that part of the Yangtze which flows through arid gorges, the walls of which are partly covered with a cactus, a species of opontia native to America, hut now widely distributed In Yunnmi by birds, which feed on . the succulent fruits, dlxsemlnurins the unharmed, undigested seeds Great Mountain Ranges The grandeur of the deeply en trenched livers is enhanced by rlio -- mighty ranges with snow-chid peaks 4 which setmcale then tine of the lineal Is undoubtedly the Ksukerpu range,, sepn rating the Salts In from the Me kong. and which must reach an eleen tlon of 24.<>KI feet, the highest peek of, that range being Mount Mlyelzlnm. The Mekong-Yangtze reaches Its highest points some -JO.tsUl feet. In Mount I'eiuiashan. while the Kulwtn Irruwuddy divide culminates in Mount Keuylcliunpo. nearly 'Jti.iSKI feet In height, the eastern branch of the Irm waddy flowing parallel to the thren greater streams for some distance, es|ieclnlly in the Chinese part of its course. Lured by the magnificence of lbs mountain ranges snd lite weird and little known chasms In which theas mighty livers flow, as well ss by the strange tribes living on the slopes of their gorges snd in their valleys, early one October the expedition lead er left hit headquarters In the llttls Nashl hamlet of Ngnluko. on the U klang snow range, to explore and to photograph. The monsoon ruins were not yet orer when the party of fifteen mew set nut accompanied hy a large cnr nvan. which carried snpplles for more than three months. The troll toot them down the l.lklnng plain to the hamlet of Pnshnkal; thence over ? smnll spur, on the top of which the noonday menl was taken at a Nuslil wayside kitchen. The paved road was execrable and the rain .anile the much worn rocks so sllp|>ery that whenever possible a narrow track beside the pavment was used. Thus, mads In this part of the world are often entirely abandoned nnd new pnes made hy the constant trot of pnxelnz caravans. The following day the party climbed a high spur, reaching an elevation of lO.UtM feet, nnd passed through coun try where enormous sinkholes tilled with shnihliery afforded excellent hid ing places for roving brigands A well graded ruck trail led down Into ?he Yangtze valley, and along the left hsnk upstream to the hsmlet of Shiku. or Hock Drum. ? It was market day In Shiku nnd Its single street was crowded with men. women, mules, pigs. dogs, children, nod what not. The crowd was rons posed mainly of Nnshl. I.lnsu. and I.olo trlhespeople. who hronght vegetables, pigs. etc.. to the market. Funeral in Budsuolo. At nudsunlo. a Nnshl village farth er up the Yangtze, some one had given up his mortcl toll; mourners were . parading around In grayish white gar ments and headdresses, while leaning ngalnsf the wall of the deceased's house wns a long row of almost life size human effigies made of hnmhoo framework covered with pnper. There were also huge paper horses, sedan chairs, cnstles. and towers of paper, all to he burned at the grave. These imaginary servants, horses etc, were to mlnlste- onto and comfort the de parted In the shadow world. The fifth day from l.lklang the party reached fimtlen. on the hanks of a tributary of the Yangtze, along which the trail new followed a mountain range, up and down through valleys and Tillages, till It led out upon the plain of l.utien and a much-scattered village of tlu same came, nestling on the slopes of the Mekong-Yangtze divide. Below lay a beautiful amphitheater: to the right an Imposing building oa the hillside, a lamasery, the firs: oat post of the Tibetan church. The way now ascended through pine and spruce forests to the summit of the Yangtze-Mekong watershed. Utl ping, as the divide Is known. Is one brood. ondnhitJng range of alpine meadows, some 11,000 feet In eleva tion. bordered by a dense forest of the loveliest hemlocks The view toward the Yangtze in the cast was wonderful, the long rsagas stretching frem north to sooth aa {v as the eye cotfld see, while below ray | thy scattartM hamlet of l.utien, atitl enshrouded ta <n<*?laf aU(C
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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Dec. 27, 1928, edition 1
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