Newspapers / The News Reporter (Whiteville, … / March 20, 1924, edition 1 / Page 1
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V 1 t 4- 7 rr ' y Columbus County Paper-r-Everybody Reads It" 'The Columbus County Paper -Everybody Needs If "Z3 ET) LJW U-Fourth Year FOR THE COUNTY OF COLUMBUS AND HER PEOPLE Two Dollars Per Year WHITEVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY MARCH 20, 1924 NUMBER SIXTEEN 1 i I ''V;''' I I U U U UfzD Vcociv - , 0ve rnor the Stan Great Educational ds Forth in Bronze Square. Work of " Rocrlum, Sculptor v - baleie March 13. Charles antiey - d tood forth to- ( t i J years, a heroic hu- unveiled by a master bronze, a noble spirit after figure st. i hv mon who loved and were fill- led,fhim; ,nlinrp on which Gut- nnSlun-'s handiwork of Aycock $01?U .u ctocrp nn which th5 na? ,,t thp memorial exer- al t'u , Phr1p? Avpnck OK wil Charles B. AycocK, jr.. oi , v,,,, the wonaeriui wur m i and sioiit. " 7' " tof 1 anu Mr. B. A. Anderson Dies at Fair Bluff Widely Known in Columbus County And Adjoining Counties; A Widowand Seven. Children Survive Him Three Weddings But It Was Not Good Day - Farmers About a Month Late With Some of Their Work; A Forest Fire; Many Weddings Dur ing a Day Mr. B. A. Anderson, one of the most influential citizens of Fair Bluff, died at his home last Satur day evening at four o'clock fol lowing a brief illness from Para lysis. Mr. Anderson was 72 years of age and is survived by his wifand seven children by a former marriage. The children are Messrs. H. H. An derson, of Dillon, S. C; B. B. Ander son, and E. L. Enderson, of Spartan burg, S. C; B. P. Anderson, of Lex ington. Ky., and Mesdames. J. E. Dick, A. P. Powell and J. B. Jones, of Fair Bluff. Mr. Anderson was a native Horry county, S. C., he came to Fair Bluff fifty years ago to engage in tor Morrison farming and the mercantile business behalf of the state in He enjoyed a wide acquaintance in Columbus, Robeson and Horry, coun children's governor the in AvfOCK i"1 huE'ht. . In,,, 'i' n monies coming line j? A u,. j5t 0f state assemDiy o iwuie.s .nrfit an understanding , of - him i!nVl 1 - H mil H'llOl I.Hpr and every ciucn n.. .., .11 was UDOUt, IUI iNUlLIl vjai"- " i i t, never proaucea a sun ihur- allv loved m eaucauonai cn- Aycock. classmate of Josephus Daniels, niend, both delivered ad- ,-uioirizing this great man lovinr tributes to nis t in at crowds attended the Into His Early Life Clarendon, March 18 A few days since we were talking to one of our oldest citizens, who has nearly rounded out his four score years, about the unusual weather during this month. He said that, never in his memory had March been so cold as this year. In our boyhood days nearly all farmers planted their corn crops in March, and a great many of them were through planting by the middle of the month. Very little, Mf any, corn will be planted in this community this year during this month. Everything appears to be at least thirtv davs late at this of!timi;- . . 1 ine monotonyi the times was j broken in the Needmore section last Monday afternoon, so we have been informed, by a forest fire and fight. ! No damage of any consequence is Mr. Hinson's Residence Had Narrow Escape Mr. Ward Laying For Groundhog With Murderous Intent; Dr. Currie Supceeded Post master at Tabor Clarendon, March 18. Pink Ward says that on next groundhog day "Uncle" John Narrates Wonderful Ghost Story Five Miles of Road Are Finished Daily Interviews Citizen Who Ha Com-; North Carolina Is Carrying On And I Completing Enormous Am- ount of the Road munion With A Heavenly Visitor Svev lvir. ( haries i. f)v Alderman, . XT ,,,n0k. ;.ini Hon. ceased. The interment was in the Fair Bluff cemetery with Masonic honors. pavi-u raory L'hai Lcatin'ia v; ot ar.i unty orn a the outbreak of the Civil War, arie avcock va:- ciii .i-x of it, ono - and he erew to man bd during tne perioa oi xveeun- uction. He was. thereiore, ot a?e to receive vivid impressions the events of both periods, yet t old enough to imbibe the bitter ss to which they gave birth. He de frequent and effective use ot 1 impressions of the conditions un which he passed his boyhood ks in his campaign speechs, and ; ore juries which, taken aitogetn reveal the vividness of his re lections of those davs. He re- mbered. he said, 4 the brs ot the HP5 ni vlo crrootoiv Tv,0 i reported by either. funeral took place from the Bap- L..Mr: N- Jolly and family ot tist church in Fair Bluff, Sunday i Wilmington, motored over to Claren afternoon and was in charge, ofi0" last Sunday and attended serv Rev. F. T. Wpoten.'palTor of tie de-!lces the ?aVlst church After noon with friends here, they re turned to the city. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Jordan, of Wilmington, arrived Sunday and are spending a few days with relatives near Mollie this'' week. Mrs. C. W. Long, of Wilmington, is spending a few weeks with the parents of her husband, Rev. and Mrs. J. Q. Long, who are both in very feeble health. Rev. Joshua Harrelson will preach at the Methodist church here next Sunday morning at 1 1 o'clock. The public is invited and will receive a hearty welcome to this service. Three weddings are reported among the young folks in this part the county last Saturday, and Toss Coin in Court ! i A dispute in a separation suit overi whether a man should pay his wife 35 or 40 shillings a week was settled! in an English court oy tne lawyers tossing a coin. The woman's lawyer called "heads" and won. , Lapland Women Small. women of Lapland are among averaging in height, Hiantley Aycock, tlie great , i Governor oi rsorxn baio- tue smallest in tne worm,' i; youngest son ol a tarn- 0nly tour feet nine inches i hildren, born to Benja- ' Serena Avcock in Nahunta nn. FiPPmnntV Wavne North Carolina, and young .rth Carolina, in 1859. little more than a year oe- Clarendon, March 18. The Bible (times we read frequently of angels he is going to watch for the lit- visiting many of the earthly inhabit tle rascal and when he comes out ants, among them Sarah, the wife he is going to do his dead level best! of Abraham, her name and that ot to kill him. If his going back into his winter quarters is going to cause all the bad weather we have had since February Second, he cer tainly must not be allowed to go back. Former Postmaster W. C. Graham, of Tabor, was in town one after noon last week. Mr. Graham is now traveling for The Raleigh News and Observer. He was succeeded as postmaster March 1, by Dr N. K. Currie. The rural mail carriers of the state were pained to learn of the death last week of Mr. R. F. Gore, who has, been in the R. F. D. service, as carrier from Wilmington, more tnan twenty years, ivir. liore was her husband later beinc cnan&ed by the Lord to Sarah and Abraham. Gideon was also visited by an angel of the Lord, as well as Gad, Zecha riah, Moses, David. Joseph. Mary, John and many, others. iTraore re cent times we have heard people, whose veracity we had no cause to doubt, talk of seeing spirits in dif ferent form. While" we have never had this experience ourselves, we have ever been an attentive auditor, and, unlike many people, who claim that all such visions were nothing more than imagination, we havecon tented ourself with the beliei that everybody is not endowed with the gift. For many weeks different people of Work Trinity College, March 10. "Ap proximately five miles of good roads are being finished per day in North Carolina by the State highway mission," Frank Page tola" a audience in the West Duke build ing at Trinity college last night. The speaker, who is head of the com mission, also stated that 3,500 miles of improved roads has already been finished inthe State. Over two and one-half miles of hard surt u are being finished in the state each day. "The efficiency of the commission can not be attributed to any one in dividual, because road building is a collective work, and the success is due to the united action of the men who compose the commission," Mr. Page declared in disclaiming indi vidual compliments for the success oi tne system, iur. Fage came arm ed , ...... " - ..-. , - - I pi -wivn n rrr L- r-F 1 mi -.. r. .i-U i U X. , host of the North Carolina Rural community nave tola us of the - r-- r Letter Carriers' association at its experience a gentleman has been -v- win. ne it- coVvenn'ln WrTghtvUle, las? feving with visits, from what he is A15 July, and won the friendship of er- convincea is angels irom Heav- L m--,T Tu ery carrier who attended the meet- tn- ce nrst nearing there- thlt vw " p 7n Vv iQoi in- He spared neither time nor!Prt we have bcen very much in- Vv, the years 1921 and in.,. ne spaicu neitnei umc norj ...:" -n : 1925 the commission will have han- money for the comfort and eniov- l1L!5Lt-a ana ere . anxious to give , , 0;0-li iv,iiir. .in ment of the carriers and he will the stoi'y to our readefs, but havt .ovei lghty dollils r be cherished in their memory. iR,Iinea irom uoing so until we , - & - could get the information first nand we went to this V .T, mSt ,?terefln- nart of the ectnrp vvna tho afot. e ior tne express i 'i . " ' : nnvnncn -P on infnv.n.,,, u-t-'u ,iufni uicti ine system, oniv coverina- of what might have heen p serious ; " 0 n nmj L until 1 6 er cent of the total of conflagration, but for the roicf nJ t un til the stato will when finished serve work ot some ot his guests bunday , ., 8o ner cent of the State's traffic . -ivh ri- i 1 1 i 1 1 1 r i 1 1 1 1 i i ; mt no lr rift Thn - - . ever be cherished in their memory. .V -" icaiuciiv. lSeveral weekg agQ " ":"u' l 1. 1 V Jt : gentleman's horn iii:vv jullii un Liie iuul as me resuiL ! in North Carolina, and young Ay : eork was forced to nursue his edu-iof 'cr-tion in a haphazard sort of way at I it was not a good day for weddings, "cl pvivate schools as chanced to either. Mr. J. J. GarreH, Jr.. of be conducted within his reachThe Clarendon, route one, "and Miss first of these schools was at Nahun-! Bertha May Todd, were married m tn where th people of the com-I Whitevflle ; Mr. Jabe Hardie. ofTVlol munitv. bv "uniting- their small! lie, and Miss Ruth Ward, of Tabor, the third couple to enter upon the means, had employed a teacner.iiere Charles Aycock, under the chape ronage of his six older brothers, first entereckschool. From Nahunta to Wilson, thence to Kinston, the ambitious lad pur sued his search for an education Young Aycock entered the . Uni versity of North Carolina in the fall of 1877. His appearance made a distinct impression upon his fellow- closing students, and many of them recall reat internecine strife vividly" the strong, sturdy-look- Lich swept over my (his) country ing country boy, upon his , iirst e a cloud of destruction." and touch witn a worm soiuewimi recalled how his own elder broth- than his own neighborhood. hays and other Confederate sold- one of them, Hon. Francis W. Win- s, returned irom tne army stun: x icwu vivmij xnov iy rearv. v.orn and sorrowiui, to ing wnn nctiiea u. .yy.yjn.. .yo d their farms gone to ruin, their sitting in a nacK in iront oi vvau- pees down, their ditches filled, son s notei on nis amvdi in nayci fcir stock slaughtered, in too many Hill to enter the State University. tances their houses burned." j A crowd of Sophomores were pre here was neither food nor raim- j sent to greet the newcomers with ft, and those who had in the past yells and cheers and otner eviueiices, tored for them were free, and of fraternal sonciuiae ana scnoowi- re enjoving their new freedom ly welcome. Aycock was yet a ooy H:h a license which imperiled life in appearance ana Dare auout iua Id property, atternoon. 1 he wind wras high and sparks from the chimney lodged on the dry shingle roof and took fire, which was gaining headway rapidly when discovered. There was no ladder close at hand, but fortunate ly about a half dozen of his friends were visiting him, who soon reached the fire with water, by climbing on eachothers shoulders, and ex tinguished the flames. The graded school "h'ereTctdses Fri day and an interesting program will be rendered" at night. On account of liiness of the pas- matrimonial voyage was Mr. Leon Mills, and Miss Beulah Coleman, of Tabor. All the above are pop ular young people in their com munities, and have the best wishes of their many friends. J. D. Frink. BIG LUT LIQUOR CAPTURED did we ive the opportunity of hearinp- the ! storv direct from Ins own mnntJi I This man is Mr. Frank Edge, a farmer of about .sixty years, who lives two and a half miles from .Clar endon, and is known in hfs com munity as a man of truthfulness. His second wife was an invalid for about five years, andaBqut a year and a half since, she became insane j The automobile and gasoline taxes I were discussed fully, and he pre sented conservative figures to show that the State is saving over one mil lion dollars per year by using the automobile and gas taxes as a basis for issuing: bonds for the roads. By 1930 at the present rate the state will be able to issue bonds for the tor, Rev. W. A. Coleman, the pul i . T-V .. ill ' pit at tne baptist cnurcn was iuiea . sjcai wreck. However, after Dy Kev. j . iiarreison, last aunaay was relieved of the great task morning, who delivered a most m-! caring. for his wife; lis health teresxmg ana neipiui sermon. j. u. proved very much. rrinK. OmAim r Imnvn , wtillis-wTi Jrtl and was taken to the State HospitaLjarR Pafelv for the insane, at Raleigh', and ' ' he .uiS-i, 1 in that.inatituJion.Dur- LET ME COME"IN mg the illness of his wife, Mr. Edge ' was continually by her bedside, and T i. gave her his undivided attention. I Let me- Cme ,n Where Vou s,t wep- linfil & kimcolf woo nzmvln o tiTitt Jlio 9 Jf e. Wli UVJ A A A A A Lj V A j TTC40 i V ill IV CL Lll V he ol im HOW TO BED WEET POTATOES anri thoir fiplds were, the simplicity and naturalness of i" - f - - T V--V V .. - " I - . .1 A . . 1 t pe to waste They were without lone, who has just ie.it tne piow nan pital and without material with ich to betrin the struecles of e. lhev had neither teams nor dies on his father's farm. He look ed as modest as a-girl, butnaf fppfed and serf -reliant. He stepped Iricuieural implements with which out of the hack with asjmucn com- begin the work." Mourning posure and as little sell-consciousness pvi.rvmi10r uQ . TTnivpr- nx -if he were aliehting from a rod - v, . if lit l t lit iuuu. - W.-- . f, nnvortir oinr,i coi-mfn - . i-oai nt wood at his own home. me ffering. genuine want were the boys, yelled land cheerd. I stepped atp " Rnf oil mftfl .tlif. fnrward erasPed his hand, looked into the ciear, nonest uiue eyes ui as true a man as ever lived, and felt for him the thrill -of friendship s ot the samp cnmmunitv. He 1 that is akin to love. . , embered "how thp nponle hat-i Amnnc Avcock's fellow students Ab Lincoln, and how "thVWere not a few "of those who have nkee folk hated Jpff Davis. Their oino IpH the wav to their solution. tures appeared ina'll the papers, 1 He strove for college honors against ey were caricatured and cartooned such men as Charles Duncan Mclver, m one end of the country to the Edwin A. Aldefman, James Y. Joy- er. A Kp T.inmln'a fnen waii pasv n Prthprt. T Pell. M. C. S. Noble, made monstrous. And they Htmrv Horace Williams; against Itred which had been engendered, i only between North and South, It even among neighbors and fam Lancaster, S. 'C. News, 11th. Two hundred and thirty-three quarts of liquor. Man e-ivine- his name as I. P. Price - ' ! arrested. Buick roadster- confiscated. Time Sunday evening between 8 and 9 o'clock. piace On. the hill-top curve just this side of the double trestle. A Buick roadster, bearing a North Carolina tag and driven by a man who gave his, name as I. P. Price, fell into the hands of the local au thorities here Sunday night as a re sult, of a collision on the Camden Charlotte highway near Jacob's Hol low, just below town, when the car ran into a Ford driven by William Reeves of Rock Hill section. The Buick car was transporting i i j. i J UA4-4-l in lir,rri a load oi impoiLeu uuuicuiru Scotch whiskey said to retail for $10 per quai"t. The haul js said to be the largest and most valuable ever captured by the local authorities. It consisTecl of oqq miWs valued at $2,300. The lot contained 178 loose quarts and the balance in cases. The roadster was being piloted by a party of parties driving a Cadillac Let me, who have not any child to die Weep with you for the little one whose' love T have known nothing rf We began our interview with him j &aturuay oy telling him what we had; The little arms that slowlv once a week. He sn-id that he final- do wly loosed. be raded them nvor ho pnnntrv. to PrMcic D Winston. Robert W. Win- Cr!' itieatinn n-f tVio rpsnpr.tive o-trwn Rn fns A. Doughton, Lock rti; an: 0f either side." It was a firaie-. Frank A. Daniels, Charlei e ''when renTi VnH lrsf if; hase. ' Tf Thnnnstft James S. Manning, and en ni -n almost forgot God. when Robert Strange. It was no To,, v ru::-; I'-'-t" thout le re rmers slight - . ... i - .a j i A-kv4-v kfcSVv i:ie familiar with death and achievement tor tne raw cuuuny uvy laiurhter .mrt lav down ; fresV, from his Nahunta farm even to ; e i in their souls." . (hold his own with these students; to , iff Hunter. . -m i i Tnflr mi 1 f 1 I T7 11 I f I - ITffi mir to lakP anv nart in this : Decome, as ".y . acknowledged leader among tnem marked as no common youth. Early in life Aycock began to de v.otl Jiis energies to the cause of edwaUion. his first public address oe ineM the interest of education in Durham county in 1879, one year before his graduation. He began the of ' law m Goldsboro pX w'v 'w ? who escaped and theman in custody has not revealed the names, .trice was arrested by Constable Huey Mont gomery of Magistrate W. T. Wil liams' court and lodged in ailLwhere he is held pending the ma King of a cash bond. i Both cars Were more or less dam aged, the lord car belongs to Wil liam Reeves being rather ' badly smashed. The whiskey cars are re ported to have been headed for points in North Carolina and are thought to have loaded at Augusta. Ga The car will be confiscated, and the. liquor is in xne cusiuuy ui Raleigh. March 18. Sweet po tatoes should be bedded in a manure heated hot-bed about six weeks be fore it is time to set them in the field, recommend horticultural workers of the Agricultural exten sion service. To make this hot-bed, an excava tion 12 to 18 inches deep should be made under the frame and in this should be placed stable manure to a depth of 8 to, 12 inches. This should be watered if dry and well packed. On this should be placed 3 to 4 inches of clean sand in which poatoes have never been jrown. After heating has reached the highest point and dropped to 80 or 85 degrees F., the potatoes should be firmly placed in the bed leaving at least an inch of space between them. If the potatoes are too close, the sprouts will be so criwded that long spindling plants will be produced. After placing the potatoes. cover them with sand to the depjh of about an inch, and the sprouts be gin to force their way through the surfacv aply two inche:- more of rsand. The temperature of the bed should be between 70 and 75 degrees F., the story to the public, but wanted jTheir pressure 'round your neck; the his permission to do so. and also desired the information direct from him. He replied that we were at liberty to publish the story in the newspapers, and expressed his will ingness to tell us all about his ex periences -with the heavenly visit ors. He began by saying that a short time before his wife went away the insane asylum, he had seen hands you used To kiss; such arms, such hands, never knew; May I not weep with you. Fain would I be of service, say some thing Between the tears, that would be comforting ; to But ah! so sadder than yourself am I. on ; Who have no child to die ! two or three occasions, an object near his house, that had the appear ance of a woman dressed in white. He said very little about it at the time. After, his wife went away the same object was seen around the house, -James Whitcomb Riley. Meat-Eating Peoples The inhabitants of the Argentine, are great meat eafers, tnen come the Australians and their neighbors: and sometime afterwards he i the New Zealanders. Americans awoke to find this whiterobed object Com fourth on the list. It seems standing by his beside. This hap- S the rule that the great meat-produc- pened several times occurring about once a week. He said that he finaal ly decided to findout if he could, why he was being visited in this man-! ner, so the next time he awoke and found his heavenly visitor present he mg countries are suming countries. great meat-con- asked, "What in the name of the j Lord do you want?" The angel an swered him sat down on side of bed and conversed with him for some time. He sat up on the side oF the -1 1 i i i : j?j. il until planting-out time. The bed cu' f"k uie V "f . f . ii , i hpside nis visitor, hominc nut his thepotaToes "ISTnudUto w ha " U". but feeling ! h? had lived during the illness of terinsXuld be "ive" whenever The nthin?- After conversing for sev-jw mfe, and where he had been 6 & - - oral TYilTinfoc .oVio cc-lro1 him r rrrv visited so manv times nv the. ane-el. ihe water should , , . , u i i ui witn ner out on tne porcn, wnicn - au"wi ite iuuui nau nine he has done. One thing she told him, that he had never known was, that the wife of one of. his neigh bors had tried, during the illnels of his wife, to induce his daughter who was living with him, to leave home. He asked the neighbor lady about it, and she said she could not deny it. He moved from the place where g to Lake any part in r'haj-les Aycock was old ' (i profoundly impressed elearly understanding it l at went on around him. house became a favo lezvous for the Nahunta who, of a summer's even- fathered on his broad piazza '! u:-ed politics far into the rc i unknown auditor. fnr thoUffh aries v. as always early ordered off - be sometimes slipped out ie Dack window in - his night tnes. pv.cr,i :i n j ind hidine under the front cn steps, lav there as. nuiet as i(N of u - ' lv'! vVar and Reconstruction i had ' "'' H.(, -mKlv. school.. RVtm Calvin H. Wiley, had .buiJtE soil becomes dry. be applied lightly usmg a spnnklmg thEh ' away, which he traded for renUy. e an inr nnrnosp. . r z . r . . . : .1 1 -n .1 1 . an open door, which he had closed ; ana ne sun nas tne regular weekly upon retiring. On the porch she visits as before. talked with Him some more, and I l seems that no other person has told him she was going away, but, even this week visitor, but him would come again, and made her J self, but a few weeks before he accent into the skies. He describes moved to his new place, he saw out his visitor as the most beautiful ob- j in "his field a small figure dressed a? 1 can for purpose. Only disease-free seed should be bedded and this is secured by treat ing the potatoes in a solution of cor rosive sublimate one ounce to eight gallons of Water for c"ight to ten minutes. Her rob-is a little girl. This wa3 also seen by n urine tut- 1 ii 1 iir: u auviv va. w rr,ln,,nnfi 4.u: ,inmMinm viesi? and on May zotn oi tnat cat nu-d on in their hearine df married Miss Varma Davsi Wood- ward of wnson. icu y cai was married to Miss CoraL. Wftod ward younger sister of his first wife died the previous year. After serv ing Ais state in many other ways 'he was elected governor, in 1900, hen be lead the states through thC me- m6rahle : struggje for .white - Lativ. : tie aronuea ueu fT J i JallnaWnir 91) .1(1- mn u.' i i -m. iir.il w a. a ,a . Trie -faorite'subiect. Unw UicW uu,,-' . . r. -. - J versa! Edacation." j- LuKpIs on the bottles, it is said bore the name of Haig & Haig, well known manufacturers of high grade bottled liquors. Inscriptions on the labels it was said, carried information that the fluid wasthe product from' a formula designed es pecially for royai personages, suui as klngs,princes, dukes, etc., though it is H5elieved it would be acceptable to many of our plain every day em zens. The first and last qustiona be ing asked now by everybody-is, " wonder what they are-going to dc with it?" TVith the b"ig batch of irnor rio-hf in our midst it was easily noticeable that "some" were rattled.. not having been treated-to ,.ucn; avalanche of the real stuff imamy moons. .Witb.the entire catch. undet lock, arid key "ere rat could,nof get to it," said Sheriff HuntervaP vr rosf assured' that itrjwill "be, dr1 tposed r f through proper channels ject he has ever seen. nnvo v-'mtn r n n rnv tP5riiro ffro ' Vne Honrrhror fmo ri-l J-.it r. What is believed to be the most ii CT1rtW - . nAJrrAA m, ij i aavo iiuuu- jl vuu. untc. a lie: ui)i-ib XL w do occ 1 1 ; some. Her form glitters in the bv Mr. Todd. Mr. Ed's-e went out. on the porch for some water and call- Most Valuable Handkerchief. What is believed to be the i valuable handkerchief in the world 1.1 jl TA HiT.i. etonp ro veutun uuwyi iudl-jdark Re remembers distinctly all gneiiLa u wiy. h tithat she told him the first time she purest oia v eneuai.wwa.il. A 1 conversed with him, and on each periect condition, in spite oi me fact that it was made in theJFif teenth century. ,It has been ap- r u nnn visits as long-as his wife lives. He least $15,000. s fhat npaA np fppiino. flnv Well, Shirt. Are Higher Wow. j her yisits and .g gJad gee her come . ed The reply wag Do nQt lef. Mr Col. Henry Branson Varner, of She now spends about fifteen mm- Todd bother me," which was heard Lexington, does not seem to be split- utes with him on every IMdayTr by both young Todd and Mr. Edge's ting his shirt for Senator Underwood or Saturday morning between 1 and ; daughter. This visitor has not been subsequent visit, for she pays him a visit every Friday night, and has told him that she will continue her ing to his daughter and Mr. Tod' they both came out and saw the phantom. Young Mr. Todd started towards it, but when it moved away he did not advance further, but retreated. Mr. Edge, however, followed it for some distance, fmal- for the Democratic nomination for President this time. Union Republican. Wonder why? Evil Human Nature No doubt, as Freud says, there is 2 o'clock. She has explained to hinri the reason of her coming, and ne savs hewould not take thousands pf dollars for what she has told hihl pertaining to himself and wife- only, which she told him not to tell, and evil human nature in, all of us.- But he avs the. only fear he 5 entertains civilization consists in holding a is telling anything she has told him tight rein on it. instead of letting it I not to telL-' She; has told some go like u savage. things to tell other people, wbch seen smcehe moved to his recent! acquired property. Mr. Edge sa:d that some peoDh1 say thatit is the devil after him, but he takes an entirely different view of the matter, and contends that nothing so beautiful, and, pure as his kweekly visitor , could in anv wav I nave any connection ' v. ith 'ills Sa tanic Majesty; ) V. v ii A I . J " ' A :.:a , 7 ... : -
The News Reporter (Whiteville, N.C.)
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March 20, 1924, edition 1
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