Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / June 9, 1919, edition 1 / Page 1
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COMMUNITY CHAUTAUQUA, LUMBERTON, N. C, JUNE 10-14- ROBESONIAN WATCH LABEL ON( YOUR PAPER AND DONT LET SUB SCRIPTION EXPIRE THE DATE ON THE LABEL tIS THE' DATE TOUR PAPER WILL BE STOPPED. ESTABLISHED 1871. SINGLE COPT FIVE CENTS. COUNTRY. COQ AND TRUTH ZM A YEAR. DUB TS ADVANC3 VOL, L LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY, JUNE 9, 1919.1 NUMBER 35 1 O.FJ UNITS OF 81ST AT NEWPORT NEWS Some Members of Wildcat Divi sion Arrived From Fr'ance . Sunday. Bringing about 2,500 troops, most ly units of the 81st (North and South Carolina and Florida national army) division, the. battleships South Car olina and Missouri arrived at New. port News yesterday from Brest. The units aboard include the 817th field artillery complete, battalion headquarters ,and Companies E. F. and G of the 306th ammunition train: the Third corps artillery park, and four casual companies, including two for New York. ALFORDSVILLE WILL VOTE ON ROAD BONDS JULY 1STH. $60,000 is Amount Alfordsville Will Vote On 17 Townships In Line Dates for 3 Other Townships Changed to July 15. At an adjourned meeting of the Soard of county commissioners held ere today a road bond election was ordered hel din Alfordsville town ship July 15. The amunt to be voted upon is 160,000. This makes a total of seventeen of the twenty-five town ships in the county that have voted or will soon vote on bond issues for road purposes. The date fbr the elections to be held in Wishart, Thompson and Lumber Bridge town ships was changed by the board to day from July 10 to July 15. As has been stated in The Robesonian, elec tions were ordered in these townships at the regular meeting of th com missioners Monday of last week. The commissioners met today for the purpose of settling with Sheriff R. E. Lewis for taxes collected for the year 1918 and preparing a new jury list from which jurors will be drawn for the various courts. TOWN TAX LEVY $1.78 ON PROPERTY; $5.34 ON POLL Increase is 10 Cents on Property and 30 tents on Poll Roal Oil for Streets To Enforce Dog Ordi nances. The town lax leyy for the fiscal year 1919-1920 on property is $1.78, as compared with $1.68 last year, an increase of 10 cents. The poll tax levy is $5.34, as compared with $5.04 lant year, an increase of 30 cents. The levy was fixed by the mayor and board of town commissioners Friday efternoon and is divided as follows: General purposes, 62 cents; sinking fund, 66 cents; school fund, 50 cents. The poll tax is divided as follows: General tax, $1.86; sinking fund, $1.98; school fund, $1.50. The general tax was lowered ten cents from last year's levy and the school tax increased 20 cents over last year, and the 30 cents increase in poll tax will go to the school fund, these increases being the special tax recently voted by the public school district. Mr. Ira B. Townsend, town citrk and treasurer, was instructed to or ider ten barrels of road oil to use on pome of the dirt streets of the town for keeping down dust. The police force was instructed to enforce the dog ordinances of the town. The board rescinded a recent ordinance making it unlawful for dogs to run at large in town. The 'ordi nance as it now stands provides that all dogs running at large in town shall be muzzled from May 16 to October 1, each year, and prohibits bulldogs from running at large in town at any time. NATION-WIDE WIRE STRIKE ORDERED JUNE 11. . PRESBYTERIANS WILL RAISE MILLION DOLLARS Will vBegin Campaign Immediately For Educational Institutions. COUNTY ROAD BOARD ASKS FOR $100,000 FEDERAL MONEY The county road board met tody and applied for $100,000 Federal aid for road work in Robeson. In order to "get the Federal aid the State and county will appropriate a like amount, making a total 0f $200,000. ROBESON LEADS AS USUAL. This County Tops the Column of 72 Cotton-Growing Counties of State With 63,857 Bales Raised Last Year Robeson Leads the World As a Cotton County. - North Carolina's cotton crop re ported Saturday to Maj. W. A. Gra ham, commissioner of agriculture, breaks all records, with the excep tion of 1911, with a yield of 919,338 bales, more than a quarter million in excess of the 1917 crop. The great est cotton production in the history of the tSate was that of 1911, when the crop was 1,125,000 bales. Raleigh correspondence of the 7th to the Greensboro Daily News gives the fol lowing: "Robeson county leads the list as usual. The county with the super- Dec'sion to immediatey begin a campaign to raise $1,000,000 for edu cational institutions of the Presby terian synod in North Carolina was announced at the conclusion of a meeting ,in Charlotte Thursday of representatives of these institutions. The announcement explained that Davidson college, Flora ftlacdonaV-l college, Queens college, Peace Insti tute, Mitchell Institute and six oth er institutions will participate in the distribution of the proposed fund. That Davidson college will receive $400,000, was the only allotment an nounced. A resolution passed stated that as "Flora Macdonald college has already had pledged to it $50,000 upon con dition that it raise $100,000 by De cember 15, 1919, for a nendowment, and whereas it has approximately $70,000 of that amount, and gives up its right of way in Orange Presby tery, it is agreed that out of the first money and pledges raised in this campaign the institution is to have paid to it a sum sufficient to cover the deficit between $70,000 and $100,000 but not to exceed $30,000 as a part of her allotment." Telegraph and Telephone Operators W ho Are Members of C .T. U. A. Ordered to Strike June 11th Local Telegraph Office May Be Affected. A nation-wide strike of telegraph and telephone operators who are members of the Commercial Tele graphers' Union of America was or dered Saturday o take effect Wed nesday, June 11, at 8 a. m., standard time. The order was issued in .Chi cago at general headquarters of the union on instructions from J. J. K.6 nenkamp, international ' president. The strike order applies to employes: of the Western Union Telegraph Co., the American Telephone and Tele graph Co., and the Postal' Telegraph & Cable Co. with its associate insti tutions. It was estimated at headquarters at Chicago that the strike would ef-J feet between 60,000 and 100,000 in dividuals of whom nearly 25,000 were said to be members of the un ion. Newcomb Carlton, head of the Western Union, said Saturday night that the strike would amount to noth ing. Employes of the Western Union in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, North and South Carolina, West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mis sissippi and New Orleans were or dered to go on strike immediately last Thursday night. President Ko nenkamp said the strike order was issued in support of Atlanta telegraph- and telephone operators who went out several days ago. The strik ers claim to be fighting for right to belong to labor unions, collective bar gaining, reinstatement of workers discharged in 1918, and better pay and working conditions. Mr. S. H. Hamilton, manager r,f the Lumberton Western Union oClce is a member of the union but received no instructions when the first order was issued ,that applying only to operators at relay points, and is still on the job. His joining the strike Wednesday depends, he says, upon whether or not he receives in structions from his division head quarters to that effect. The strike will not effect operators of the local telephone exchange, Manager Rogers says. INTERNATIONAL SITUATION Understanding on German Counter Proposals May be Reached This Week President Wilson Probab ly Will Leave fox U. S. Soon Peace Terms for Austria Again Assailed. The Associated Press gives the fol lowing summary: The new week begins with the Ger man counter proposals still the sub ject of discussion. The council of four with Premier Orlando, of Italy, ab sent, again went over the proposals Sunday and . while various days have been mentioned unofficially for re plying to the Germans, no agreement ham been reached by the council. The latest belief expressed, howev er, n to the effect that an understand ing may be arrived at the end of the week, with the possibility of its com ms sooner.', It may be significant of an early impending agreement that the depar ture of President Wilson for the Uni ted States is reported as probable within 10 days or two weeks. Sunday's discussion included one of WATCH THE LABEL. PARDON ASKED FOR ROBE-! SO NBOY KILLED IN FRANCE ' , , t j Vatch the date opposite the nan ,.,.. , a t o on the label on yoar paper. When year Forney ttilliams Was Serving Sen-! ,nbKrJption pife. ,our paper will tence in State Prison, Escaped and be stopped. This applies to all sab Joined Army Insured Life For scribers. His Mother for $10,000. Raleigh News and Observer, June C. T(ra T nrT. raxra An appeal was made to Goveror; - Bickett yesterday for the exercise of his influence to secure $10,000 worth of government insurance for the mother of Forney Williams, eighteen-year-old white boy of Robeson county, who, serving a sentence in the State orison, escaped, joined tho J army under an assumed name and n a ... . r ! was klUM in action in rxnnce. iw government declined to pay the in- tx ranee or e. fugitive. The proposition was ?aid before the Governor jesterday by Mr. E. Gar land Browr. an attorney ox wtnstrr Salem, who himself was in the s- r vice, and has before interested him self in the young man. Shortly after Williams escaped, Mr. Brown wrote to the oGvernor staling the circum- the most diffucult outstanding ques- stances inching Williams' enlist Miss Annie Bullard of El rod has accepted a position with the Planters Bank A Trust Co. Regular meeting Victory council Junior Order American Mechanics this evening at o'clock. License has been issued for the marriage of Austin G. Prevatt and Eula May Prevatt; Hasley Ivey and Sallie Allen. Special communication St. AI ban's lodge No. 114, A. F. & A. M., tomorrow evening at 8:30. Work in third degree. Mr, A. H. Stone of Orrum was a Lumberton visitor Saturday. Mr, Stone says he has heard of no oppo sition to the bond issue of $25,000 on which voters of Orrum township will .i a. i D. mon iTi rnp nrmv 1 1 nn r rns nnnif i i lions mat aiiecun me wrman-r u-, - --- . lish frontier. The presntation of a ogers ana asKeoior a paraon. ir,e u majority of the minor commissions' I Governor declined to act then. I Dr. R. S. Beam, local eye, nose, reports is expected to occupy the! Forney Williams was convicted; ear and throat specialist, will leave ,,r,niii ntnfmn Mondav. it has! July. 1914, when he was e:ghteeni tonight for Atlantic City, N. J., to been rointed out that this may tend! years old, for burglary in the second attend a meeting of the American t make more raDid nrozress oossi-1 de ree- 11 seems, according to the! Medical association. He will be away Jjle evidence, that Williams was very -n- c:maie wun me son soi renceman Phillips ,of Lumberton, and spent much of his time at the house. One A plan for the solution of the Adriatic problem, which has met fprnop will form narf of the discus-1 n'ht, he entered the home and stole lions taking place at the Italian ! rott. ' the c?th'a ne of e frontier between Premier Orlando and Vice President Colosimo. The peace terms for Austria are asin assailed. Presidnt Seitz ibe fore the national assembly described them "impossible" and meaning the death of the country by starvation. Foreign Minister Bauer in a report on his conference with Dr. Renner, head of the Austrian peace delega tion, was similarly outspoken against the document. . Count von Brockdorff-Rantzau 1 as returned to Versailles from his visit to Germany, where he is said to have been called in connection with tho re cnet disturbances. Phillips boys. He was caught m the act, and the evidence was convincing. He entered a plea of guilty to the charge of second degree burglary and Judge Harry Whedbce scntencsd hi mto fifteen years in the State Prison. He entered the prison July, "4, 1915, an descaped August 20, 1915. It was in St. Louis that he enlisted in the service shortly affer his es cape and was sent to France almost immediately. His (enlistment was under the name of Rogers, and it was under this name ' that he went over the top and w killed in i France. a week. Mr. W. G. Kirk of Pembroke was a Lumberton visitor Friday. He is a candidate for road supervisor of Pembroke township which will vote on the 18th inst. on a road bond is sue of $50,000. One of Lumberton' most popu lar young ladies will be married here tomorrow to a young man from an other town. The Robesonian is not at liberty to give the names of the contracting parties. Messrs. J. Preston Cashwell and Adrian M. Britt "hopped off" Fri day morning for Georgetown, 3. C. on a canoe. They are making the trip down Lumber river and are fish ing along the route. State Senator H. E. Stacy wilt address the citizens of Wishart town ship on the township road bond law CLASS DAY EXERCISES. WIRES RESTORED TO TELE GRAPH AND TELEPHONE COS. I at Allenton next Satuday at 3 p. m. Former Rural Policeman Eli -Phil-i All the people living in this town lips says that the statement in the! ship are urged to be present. f. . . . .1 story copied above from the News I Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Caldwell and Graduating Class of Lumberton High; end .Observer to the effect that Wil- , s f Tr an,l Mis r izri.. Cald well returned Thursday night from Private Companies Resume Control Which Government Took Over Last August. Telegraph and telephone compan ies whose lines have been controlled and operated by the government since last August 1 were ordered Thursday night to resume immedi ately operations for their own ac count by Postmaster General Burle- School Closed Commencement With Delightful Exercises Thurs day Evening. The class day exercises held Thurs day evening in the auditorium of the high school building were splendid and enjoyed by a large crowd. The stage was artistically decorated with potted plants and ferns, making aj frive him a place to sleep, and look liarrisr waj intimate with his boys is incorrect. He says that the Sat urday night before the robbery on Wednesday night Wiliiams, r.oe people live near Cerro flordo, d lumbus cour.':,.-. told one of hi3 fiAIr. l'h "lina'l !,.-. t !.-, V .... to sleep and could not go home that h "L"? dub' whiciuWA StJm!? night, and the boy told him he could e "held tomorrow with Mrs. H. H. Pulaski. Va.. where thev uDent sev eral days visiting at the home of Mrs. Caldwell's father, Dr. J. W. Keister. . On account of the Chautauqua, the regular meeting of the Twenti- most pleasing background for the young graduates. The graduating class was compos ed of six girls Misses Evelina Beck- with, Marion Allen, Drina Hedgpth, Wi.iiams h.jr. with hiin. That was trie first time he ever saw the boy, Mi. Phillips .-ays. The fil .wing Wednesday nfeht Williams the home and took $84 and odd cents, son. lhe Fostofhco Denartment how ever, under the terms of Mr. Bufle-' Sarah Carlyle, Lula Norment, Annie! and he was not caught in the act but son's order retains a measure, nf con-1 Laura Phillips and five boys Mts- arrested the next day. srs. forest JVlcuiil, krwin Williams,; uov. Kickett is Quoted in Raleiah UNITS OF 81ST EXPECTED NEWPORT NEWS JUNE 14TH Expected arrival of the transport Walter A. Luckenback at Newport News, June 14, with units of the 61st abundance of God-Bless-Macs tops or Wild Cat division, composed of th column of 72 cotton growing en ,.from North . Caro jia, South arunna anu r lonaa, was announc ed Friday by the War Department counties with 63,8;")7 bales. Robe son therefore leads j the world as a cotton county. Johnston comes sec ond with 52,140; Wayne third with 39,674; Halifax fourth with 37,140; Edgecombe fifth with 34,909 and Scotland sixth with 34,587. Mecklen burg has 590. ALL 81st TO LEAVE FRANCE BY JUNE 10, SAYS PERSHING Senator Simmons received, a cable gram Thursday from General Persh ing saying that the entire 81st divi., sion was scheduled to sail from France by June 10. Unofficial re ports from France are that the di vision has already sailed, but this has not yet been confirmed by the War Department, states a Washington dispatch of the 6th. The Pershing cablegram indicates that the whole division is not yet at sea. It reads;, "With reference to your letter of May 6, the 81st division will have completed sailing from St. Nazaire about June 10." The vessel is bringing headquarters, second and third battalions, sanitary and ordnance detachments, supply and headquarters company and com panies A to M, inclusive, of the 32ord infantry. WANT A DRY WORLD. With a view to carrying prohibi tion to all parts of the world, tem perance workers assembled in Wash ington last wek for the annual na tional convention of the Anti-Saloon League of America organised Che EWorld's League Against Alcoholism." HOME FROM THE WAR. Alleged Auto Thieve Arrested Here. Henry C. Davie and Dan C. Martin were arrested here Friday by Deputy Sheriff A. H. Prevatt on the charge of stealing an automobile in Fayette ville. They had the car when arres ted and were taken to Fayetteville todav by Mr. Prevatt. The auto be- longed to Mr. Elias WoodeJ of Bla den county.; ' , 1 ' ASK FOR TEXT OF TREATY WITH GERMANY Resolutions asking the State De partment for the text of the treaty with Germany and N directing the foreign relations committee to in vestigate how copies of the unpub lished document have . reached pri vate hands, iri New York, were .adopt ed by the Senate Friday. . Mr. Braxton T. Branch, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Branch, arrived home Friday .night from France. Mr. Branch was a member of the 81st, or "Wildcat", division and landed in the States May 29, having been giv en a discharge from the army before leaving France. He came by way of Raleigh and was joined thepe by his wife, who accompanied him home. trol of the of the service, pending' final legislative action by Congress. I Regulations providing discrimina tion against wire employes because of union affiliations, maintaining ex isting rates and charges and instruc ting companies to keep special ac counts to facilitate cost settlement between themselves and the govern ment are retained in effect under the order issued by the Postmaster Gen eral. Mr. Burleson accompanied the or der with a statement giving the rea sons which impelled him to take the action. He asserted that the Presi dent having recommended the return of the properties the Senate inter state commerce committee having in dicated that immediate return was advisable and the House committee having through hearings manifested a desire for action toward that end, he felt it his .duty to return opera tive control totheVariouprivate owners. In a statement accomDanvine the formal order, the Postmaster General declared that the existing rates would remain in effect and that orders for bidding discharee of emnloves he- because of union affiliations also woud stand. 17 QUARTS LIQUOR. FORD AND 5 NEGROES NABBED Max Weinstein, Gaston Bruton and Harry Russell each of whom ren dered her or his part in a most cred itable way. Forest, McGill was not present, having completed the course at Camp Jackson. The program was as follows: Cho rus by high school girls; Salutatory Drina Hedgpeth; Class Poem Marion Allen; Last Will and Testa ment Lula Norment; Class History Annie Laura Phillips; Class Ora tion Gaston Bruton; Class Prophecy Evelina Beckwith; Trophy Bearer Sarah Carlyle; Chorus Misses Rosa Caldwell, Margie Russell, Evelina Beckwith and Sarah Carlyle; Vale dictory Harry Russell. The ushers were Misses Maitland Thompson, Elsie Thompson and Mes srs. William Edmund and Bevery AH of tr.'j ?rcuiif-:u received beau. tifu! flower an.t gilts as token i.f appreciation frc-ci their frte.ids. Anderson, has been postponed to Tuesday of next week, the. 17th, when it will be held with Mrs.'X. M. Biggs. Lizzie Walker and Mattie :tc Kay, both colored, ire in jail l.er.- in default of a $500 bonl each, ha-- ng been bound over o the Superior court by Recorder D. W. Bullock of dispatches as having said that he is1 Rowland. Lizzie was convicted of going to pardon the dead boy if it win get nis mammy the money. Williams was sentenced from Kobe on county but his home was in Co lumbus, at Cerro Gordo. THE RECORD OF DEATHS- Mr. A. B. Fisher was advised by wire this morning that his son, Pvt. Welton Fisher, landed in Newport News yesterday and is at Camp Stewart, Va. now and expects to be home- in a few days. Pvt. . Fisher belongs to 306th Ammunition train, 81st or "Wildcat" division. : Arrested at Parkton Negroes Are In Jail Here. Seventeen quarts liquor, a Ford Cr and five negroes 3 men and 2 women were arrested at Parkton Friday by Deputy Sheriff A. H. Pre vatt. The negroes gave their names as Dan Thompson, Roger Emmerson, 'I" H.t Marphy, Bessie McLaughlin and Cornelia Thompson. They are .all in jail here. . COUNTY ROAD BOARD. Mr. F. R. McNeill of Glenn wood Sec - tion. Mr. F. R. McNeill, n woll-known citizen of the Glennwood section, died suddenly Friday about 9:30 a. m. Death resulted from heart trou ble and complications. Deceased was about , 66 years old and is sur vived by his wife and eight children, having - been twice married. At the regular monthly meetine of the board of county road , commis sioners last Monday it was ordered that the road running by Centenary be left to Mr. I. T. Brown, a member: oi cne ooard. It was ordered ' that the petition of. voters on the Simon road be left Mrs. Robt. Bridarr of Bladenboro Answered Sudden Summons. As she was leaving the First Bap tist church of Bladenboro last Mon day morning, after having attended the funeral of Mrs. D. T. Pait, Mrs. Rob Bridger, Jr., waa stricken with apoplexy and fell on her door steps, speaking only once afterwards. She died three hours later. " Deceased was only 25 years old. She is survived by her husband and 2 small girls. . " manufacturing whiskey, while Mat. tie was convicted of selli if, the boj-e. Sanitary Officer Robeson says he will indict any person who sweeps tr&sh into back lots and fails to put PERSONAL ITEMS i m fti. h atlrtt FROM FAIRMONT that any Person failing to give heed Correspondence of The Robesonian. of teftftV R:3ffi raumont, iune . Mrs. is. R. Britt. inompson and daughter Mi3s Fannie and Mrs. G. W. Thompson of Fair mont spent Friday in Lumberton vis it ing relatives. Miss Thompson re cently returned from Fredericks burg, Va., where she taught during the past term. Mrs. G 1W. Thomnann rel irmoA last Monday from Chase City, Va., where she had been for several weeks. She was called home on account of tne aeatn of her mother, Mrs. T. J. Taylor, which occurred on May 11th. ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION OF CAROLINA COLLEGE ORGANIZED The Alumnae association of Carolina-college at Maxton was organ ized Tuesday afternoon of com mencement week. Mrs. R. B. John, deaft of Carolina college, spoke on the need of the association end its Possibilities. The f nilwin m wr ills UllH riH were elected : Miss Mae Seabolt nf . aon' Bank of Charlotte since the Miss Leona Martin of Yadkn ville arrived Saturday nig'it . nd is a guest at the home of her brother and sister-in-law. Dr. and M-s. J. A. Martin, East Fifth' tr;o Mis Mar tin came here from Gastonia, where she taught school during the term wh'ch closed recently. She will go tomorrow 'to B?nso:i ti- .visit rela- ti f3. Preachers endorse the Chautau qua which will be here this week. From their pulpits Rev. Dr. R. C. Beaman, pastor of Chestnut Street Methodist church, and Rev. Dr. C. H. Durham, pastor of the First Bap tist, have spoken words of endorse ment and have urged that the people of the community patronize thefee high-class entertainments. Mr. Frank, L. Nash, formerly with the National aBnk of Lumber. ton and who has been with the Union . UCttUUil ut I - , - . Troy, prsident; Mis Naomi Gren ' of year has accePtd the position of Wilmington, vice-president, and t cahier of the Citizens' Bank & Miss Jeddie Mae Bristow, of Fair- u st Co ot Rosemary, a town of mont, secretary and treasurer It about 7(0 inhabitants, in Halifax luumjr. ne wini enter upon the da ties of his new position about July 1st. Mr. and Mrs. Nash arrived here Mr. M. G. McKenzie was 75 years old ' last Thursday and that evening some 100 members of the Presbyter ian Sunday school, of which he has open for 30 days. been -superintendent for many years, It was ordered that Mr. J. L. gathered at his heme on Elm street ; Thrower be retained one month bag' and gave some expression d of. theiri er at the same salarv. 'love and appreciation . by a liberal! v The bills ordered paid are publish- . j: . . I J 1 i. i puuuuiug. ' . tu ciscwucic m uui issae. Owen" Pope, colored, aged 75 years. died Saturday night at his home about one mile west of town. . a Mr. J. A. Carlyle, local agent for the Southern Life' & Trust Co., of Greensboro, went yesterday to Greensboro to attend an agents' training school. Mr. Carlyle won a free scholarship, L ; was aeciaea tftat the first work of the association would be the imme diate establishment of a scholarship at Carolina college. , GOVERNOR OF TEXAS CALLS FOR MORE TROOPS ON BORDER Declaring that the Mexican situa tion is so critical that a larger force of troops on the border is necessary to protect lives and property of citii zens, Governor Hobbv. of Ter ho. requested Secretary Baker to call inJ u.e reaerai service the first and second brigades of Texaa and tomobilize them at a convenient point. nm .... - -wne condition of Mrs. B. M. Lawson of the Moss Neck section section, who underwent an operation at the Thompson hospital ten day? ago, is improving, last night from Charlotte and will visit home folks here until about the 20th of this month. Wide-spread rumors that Evan gelist McLendon, who conducted a great revival meeting in Lumberton through the last Christmas holidays, was paralyzed in Petersburg a few days apo while preaching nave been exploded by Petersburg, Va., papers, which carry daily accounts of Mr. McLendon's meetings. The Raleigh correspondent of the Greensboro Dai ly News writes that following his big meetin gin Raleigh, where he was given something like $6,500, Mack suffered a period of insomnia and restlessness, but that "the Virginia paper? picture him a the same old Cyclone" Mack who is going it at a. wildfire pace." . .
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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June 9, 1919, edition 1
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