Newspapers / The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.) / April 6, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
£b? ®im?a-2«?tos v I?MJ«nonr!ll« Ntw* EibtMitlieJ la 18M HwdartoBrilla Time* Established la 1MI Published every afternoon except Sunday at 227 North Main street, Hendersonrille, N .C.» by The i Times-News Co., Inc., Owner and Publisher. ' 1 TELEPHONE «7 J. T. FAIN Editor C. M. OGLB . Managing Editor HENRY ATKIN City Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Tfmes-News Carrier, in HendersonviHe, or else where, per week - 10c By Mail In Hendersonrille, per year $5.00 Due to high postage rates, the subscription price of The Times-News in Zones abo/e No. 2 will be based on the cost of postage. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post OlKee in Hendersonville, N. C. THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1933 THE P1SGAH CAMPS Construction of camps for the unem ployed in Pisgah Forest was started today. Ten camps are to be maintained in the Forest and the first construction job in-' eludes four camps. It is announced that unemployed men from cities in the eastern section of the United States will be sent into the Forest to man these camps, but; local labor will be employed in building them. Materials for construction of the camps will be purchased locally in so far ;«s possible. The first four camps to be erected inj Pisgah will be at the following places: Pisgah division, on Davidson river in Tran sylvania county; Mt. Mitchell division, on Curtis creek in McDowell county; French Broad division, near Hot Springs in Madi son county; and Grandfather division, cither on Mortimer ridge or at Edgemont in Caldwell county. The building of these camps may be ex pected to have some results in the general improvement of business conditions in this section; but the people of the section should not expect too much from this de velopment. It is said that the monthly pay roll in ten camps will be considerably more than thirty thousand dollars, but that is a very small amount of money to spread over an area as large as the greater part of Western North Carolina; and, as a matter of fact, probably the greater part of the money paid to men in the camps will be sent back home to dependents by them.' This section will profit by whatever local labor is employed and to the extent of lo cal purchases of materials and supplies; but it is practically certain that the great est benefits derived by this section will come in the future from the improvementsj made in the national forests. RECOVERY MUST BE WORLD-WIDE j (By BRUCE CATTON) The things which are attracting the most attention at Washington these days are the spectacular developments in domestic pol icy—the banking measures, the farm re lief proposals, the work relief projects and so on. But in the long run the most important! steps may be those to which we aren't | paying a great deal of attention right nowi —the preparations for long, patient and involved negotiations with other nations! which have as their goal the restoration of international confidence, world trade and general prosperity. It is well known that the administration j is making elaborate plans for this work. But the subjects to be covered are so com plicated, so far removed from the obvious bread-and-butter requirements of the mo ment, so difficult, in fact, for the ordinary citizen to comprehend, that most of us have paid very little attention to them. Yet whether prosperity is to return to us may easily depend, in the last analysis, on our government's foreign policy rather than on its domestic policy. Whether the depression came chiefly because of things that happened in Amer ica, or whether it was caused by develop ments overseas, one thing is pretty certain; we can't get full prosperity back again un less all nations have a share in it. The world has grown so small in the last generation that there is no longer any such thing as complete economic independence. We live too close to our neighbors; sick ness in one house is very apt to mean sick ness in every other house—especially so since our ideas of economic sanitation are of the sketchiest and 110 such thing as an adequate quarantine is possible. And in the long run, whether we like it or not, we must admit that prosperity has to be pretty much a world-wide affair. The measures proposed at Washington for set ting our own house in order are vitally im portant, of course; but unless international trade, international credit and internation al confidence can be restored we aren't likely to come to the end of r ir troubles. Still, a lighter-than-air ship may become too heavy for comfort. A headline says a 17-year-old boy runs a 40-acre farm in Indiana. The news lies in the fact that the farm isn't running him. Says a newspaper item, "Hope rests on beer measure." The reference is to the Legislature's hope of raising sufficient revenue to meet North Carolina's expenses; and the beer hope is something in addition to sales tax and other sources of revenue. The hope that rests on beer revenue will no doubt prove disappointing. When the peo ple of the State discover that a citizen has to drink somewhere from $30 to $50 worth of beer in order to make a contribution of $2 to the tax fund, their enthusiasm for paying taxes in this way will probably have an attack of cold feet. The Goldsboro News-Argus approves of | the action of the Wayne county commis sioners in adopting the horizontal cut plan for reducing real estate assessments in that county. Assessments will be reduced in the same proportion on all property. The News-Argus says it would cost around $7,000 to re-value the county's property and the plan adopted will cost but little in comparison. The horizontal reduction plan is favored by Chairman T. L. Durham of the Henderson county commissioners; and this newspaper is informed that it is favored by a majority of the county boards of the State. o NEWSPAPERS' OPINIONS ABUSES ARE THE CAUSE It was the open and unexcused abuse of the liquor traffic over a long period of years that final ly brought about county option in many units, state prohibition in many commonwealths, and finally the enactment of the eighteenth amendment. The people got thoroughly disgusted with the selfish and reckless conduct of the beer and liquor traffi:-. Then came a protest in the form of the national prohibition law. And the unsatisfactory conduct of the people and the wilful disregard of that same national prohibition law has so disgusted people generally that sentiment has again changed and a liberalization of the beer and liquor laws is underway. But what is happening? Even before the Jaw is in effect the interested parties are already plan-, ning to bring the beer traffic into disrepute ami1 associate it with cheap and disgraceful politics. Gov. Herbert Lehman of New York is insisting that the beer business be orderly and properly controlled. But the legislature of that state is op posing the program of the governor and a majority seem to be in favor of letting the traffic run riot and without the control of a board that would eliminate the worst features of th" business in prc Yolstead days. We believe that New York's situation is but a prophecy of what the beer and liquor business is going to be as soon as it gets in good running order. The liquor business has never been law abiding and we doubt if it ever will be of its own volition. It needs the most stringent restrictions of any business. And unless such restrictions are going to be in effect from the start of the new dispensation it will not be long before there will be such a revulsion of feeling that once again will the people vote for complete prohibition.— Hock Hill (S. C.) Herald. THE BEER MIRAGE The return of beer which will be celebrated on April 7. may not prove to be the great event an ticipated. After the federal government collects its tax and the states and municipalities get theirs and all other charges are made for production, advertising, distribution and sale, where vvill the drinker come in? The beer situation resembles that of gasoline which has been taxed until the taxes in some states amount to one-third of the retail price. It is said that the gasoline taxes have reduced the mileage of cars and have driven many of them to the garage while the wagon and buggy have reappeared on the highways. The tax«»s on beer may be disappointing to the national, state and municipal governments as well as to the beer drinkers who expect the five-cent glass of regulation size. They will not get it and, like the automobile owner, may limit their pur chases. In that event Mr. Dalrymple, the new prohibi tion head, will have his hands full watching old ''Red Eye" which carries more kick for less money than the new beverage.—Spartanburg Ilerald. IT CAN GET THEM ! If North Carolina insists upon having; good schools, it must have good teachers. The character of the teacher is the final factor I in determining the character-level of the institu | tion. North Carolina is now paying its teachers an average of less than $900 a year. It is paying convict guards that much; it is pay ing stenographers more than that. It is paying a host of other public servants more. Teachers of this state get an average of $400 less than the average for the nation. Which is to say that they can all go somewhere else and make more money if it is merely money they are working for. You say, "Let them go and get some others!'' Others that will not cost so much and arc willing to work for less. Do that, if you please, but you can not do it except by sacrificing efficiency for inefficiency, filling the school houses with a less qualified per sonnel and thereby revising the standard of public education in North Carolina downward- away downward.—Charlotte Observer. Justifiable Delay SjRViCG. JBEJLUX5, pATRONftGe •v ' <: ' •€»» ? TO PUSH BEER, j MAKING BILL | Massenburg's Measure !s| Slated for Early Pass- I age at Raleigh Tin- Tit:' 's-Ncvi ltnrc:ui I Sir Waller Hotel liALEIG'H, April 0.—The bill introduce,! in the house Tuesday! by Rep. Alassenburg of I'oik per- j mittinur the manufacture ot beer I in North Carolina is expected to ho passed by the general assembly by approximately the same ma jority by which the Francis bid permitting the pale of beer and I wines was passed by the two houses, according to opinion here. There was a concerted move I ment when the Francis bdl was being passed by the house to tack on an amendment permitting the manufacture of beer, but it wa:; decided by those who were con sidering the amendment t<» wait until the Francis bill had parsed and :»> incorporate the manufac ture of beer in a new '.ill. Tin re i*-- little opposition in ;he general assembly !o 11?«• ;k; • of a bill permitting the manulVu ture of beer and wines in the! state, since i1 is generally recog nized that not only will •< ni-mber of industries in the sitite benefit from such legislation. !"•! that i will also result in increased em ployment. While these arlvan!a«re.-~ are to lie obtained within the near fu ture, it is said by those who have) been studying the situation, the! manufacture <d' beer in North j Carolina has many tdlur poten tialities. Already, il is under-1 s ood several firms are comide: ing putting lip breweries in some; of the larger cities of the state il i the beer manufacture bill goes I through, giving employment to j hundreds of workers. North Carolina industry is ol-! ready feeling the result of the] passage by.congress of a bill per-1 milting the sale and manufacture of o.2 per cent wine and beer, and it is believed that the legalization of the manufacture of beer in this state will further stimulate cer tain industries. Several factories in the Piedmont section of th-.> state have already received large orders for staves and barrels, while some lumber companies are doing a boom-time business. Hundreds of men have been put to work in the woods cutting: hick ory and oak staves at about $9 a day. Not only is it believed that several breweries would locate in North Carolina should the Massen burg bill pass, but it is although thought likely that the establish ment of one or more bottle fac tories may result, since North Carolina produces about half tlu feldspar in this country which is one of the chief ingredients used in the manufacture of glass. It is also pointed out that if it is expected that North Carolina will raise as much as 81,500,000 from revenue on ihe sale of beer, the money that Tar Heels will pay for this foaming beverage of modest alcoholic content will amount to many times that amount. Most of this money will go out of the state, since the beer that will be put on the market in North Carolina, unless it is manu factured in this state, will come from the breweries in the East and Middlewcst. The argument advanced by th? sponsors of the Massenburg bill is that at least a part of this vast amount of money should be kept in North Carolina. Even if this legislation does not result in th > establishment of breweries in th.; state, it will .;e a safeguard in the future, they claim, pointing to tha fact that a situation could arise whereby beer might be sold to North Carolina at a monopolistic price by outside concerns who would be secure in ihe knowledge that the North Carolina law does not permit the manufacture of beer within the state. The grape industry is another factor. Parts of North Carolina i produce excellent grape?. While then' is some doub- whether there will h.' an i»i»i -cciable marke' l'< ;!.li per ceni wine—indeed, it is yencraliy agreed that there is 110 such product as .*>.2 wine —it is pointed out that some v.ay may de\elop whereby j.er cent win ■ may be developed and pu on sab-. In this event North Carolina, par ticularly the eastern pari of the stale, would benefit from the es tablishment of vineries, it is j i la i mod. By ALAN SON EDWARDS United Press Staff CorrcipondrMtt HOLLYWOOD. April <1. (IT). Henry Carat, (he young charmer fron\ I'aris, !ia<! an attack of language jitters the other day, ill though he has worked out a never-fail method of masteringj forign tongues. Garat, who can make "oughtn'n" rhyme with "important," attack id his Hollywood career wit hi bubbling confidence, but none < he j Jess he had some misgivings when the t>me came for hi first Liv.'-I lish song in "Adorable." J-:»«lish dialogue h . ' ( no ter-j rors for Carat. He has been able by usimr ?iI^ ov. n language meti od. to learn English, German andi Italian in addition to his nativei French. "To learn a language proper-' Iy," ho told me, "one -hould live! among the people and force one-i self to speak the tongue. "There are s<> many words in| Ttalian that are shrdl ensfw emm French, English, Italian and Cer-; man that are simila Hhat oneoi you get. the proper aeeent can j converse intelligently in any of, them. "I try to third: always in tl:C' Ian eu age T am sporikiiitr- If I am ii: lierlin, I think in German. I i" you attoroj.it to translate into your native language ev» ry wok! spoken to you, you'll f>«n jcti lost." Hence, Garat has spoken only English since reaching Hollywood. Even when rehearsing his i'ir.-i movie song he got along all > i.iii. Hut when the spotlights were turned on him, a CO-pie;" .' ih tra hegan tuning uu ami il;e «.i rector lined a half dozen camera in hi< general directi-m, Gara' was sliirhtl.v taken ainek. On -.he third orche.-'tra relie" .: al. a lecording of the ^••ng v/u/ taken unknown 10 Carat and then played back to hip;. "Gee, 1 hat's lousy," he re marked in pure Hollywoodoso. "Waech. I show you." .And then lie went through it in earnest. 1 heard it, and i' was swell. SIKORSKY ENVISIONS OCEAN AIR SERVJCE STI{ATKOIJf>, Conn., April (i. !""' !. Sikor.-ky. i'i'uioi;. designer and fouildi r «f ;i •>f •;.«• , i;;i-• n" doiihl that plane will il\ it rcgul. !• | asst nj;Vi • cli'.' Itil,1 be tween the United Stales m l ICu within fivi years, In ! Ik «!■•.< not holieve thf loute will he in ! Il" >1 i'P. t i ilic!"'. To fly in :he stratosphere, Si kor.-ky pointed rn it thf plane* would have to h«* hcr'iiclical'y .• t.'iih'd. Sil\fir:'!:v holicvc.-- hixunou ,"nd rooii'v plane.", sjJi'O'liritr at L'OO niiii an hour, will f;.tin th>• ha-i: fur I he I ul it continental pn-^soi: fcr route::. Planes now heirrji n:anufa< uirod have attained l'i I ni::n J:I;« luxury, he say::. There is no substitute for newspaper advertising. BY I«)i)XKY DITCIIKK i MCA S«tvu*«* Writer 'VffJ ASHIXGTON.— Miss Perkins* j " fashionable sohool for young newspapermen and young news paperwomen lias just opened in I the Department of Labor. Most of tiie hoys and girls are! tearii^g Hie facts of life—sucn of them, that Sp, as are unearthed! by Madam Scrrrlttry'fi «l«'i>ar*,Picnf — fo. the first time. The brilliant obscurantism of Prof. Jan-"" J.j Davis and Prof. William N kles. Doak, who preceded her ai. I who! could never he persuaded to call' a spade a spado, has been sup-! planted by the ruthless determi nation of the new schoolmarm to' loll all. The Hoover administration es tablished idright-of-haud as the! most fascinating of all the sci-i ences during its handling of those statistics. But Miss Per kins doesn't want anyone doing | any tricks with her figures. Shej thinks it so important that the i American people know exactly j what the trends and facts of em-j ployment are, that she is having these monthly press conferences, aside from regular conferences, simply for the purpose of an-' nouncing, interpreting and ex-j plaining. Teacher riood up behind horj •lesk as she faced tho class of about .'50 reporters. Half were' women, as editors have assigned their girl stars to the Labor De-; partment on the theory that it' takes a woman to get news from I a woman. Each member of the! class had a texlbook in the form j of mimeographed sheets givir/g employment, and payroll figures j for February and explaining the! lesson. First she told 1 ho class how the Btork—1 mean the Bureau of La-I bor Statistics—brings little sta istic.s into the world. Then howl index figures arc born. i' ipns learned thai the index of em ployment was :;imply ;i series of percentages showing what per centage the number employer] each month is of the number » m ployed in ;i selected j eriod. The base period used in this ease i the year The same facts apply to that bureau's monthly payroll hub x, showing change:; in the amount of earnings roec. i ved by employes each month as com pared with (he base yeiir. rhn ployment reports now received from 17,77.'J plants cover about 0 per cent of wage earners in manufacturing Industrie'* and a lesser per cent in 1G nonmanu fact uring industries. Whereas Professor Doalc or' Professor Davis would have urged the class to cx claim "Oh goody, goody!" and write corre sponding blurbs over the tact that the employment index for manufacturing industries had in creased from 56.15 in January fo 57.5 in February, while tlvj pay roll totals index rose from "5.S to 3G.4, Dr. Perkins poi'-lded it home that thw didn't call for any handsprings. In the first place, she said, the indexes had stood at 65.G and 4!).<>, respectively, only a year previously. Also, in every year since there had been an increase 'n both employment and payrolls as between January and February. This year's January to February employment, increase was larger than in the three previous de pression ears, but below nonmil as compared with other years (1.6 per cent as compared w:tli a 10-year average of 1.4). 'iho payroll increase, on the other hand, was the lowest for lh.it pe riod in 11 years', for the 10-year average increase was 4.9 per cent as compared with only 17 from JanuArv to Fobruafv this vear. I By Ike Walton, RedivivitJ I Thirty years aji'o a prentlemnn from tin* lower south bought a Miinmcr home l'<»r hi; family in the mountains. T'u1 hoys and j'ii!> came up every summer and named around hilarie. .1 -ly. They sv. a in, fished, hiked, rode, court ed, did everything hut plant irees, develop a ."a-dp. or any thing else in the :-h:ijj-• of work and that in ;i climate where v. (irk is delight f d. Thirty ytnir-s afterwards the (til :<•;>',!n s >i»n !«>?>!i<*cl ow I he place— !*!i mo.-tly wi, on I. •: - and maiin sonic calculation . "if ] had been hero then, f (•ouifl have set out 500 black walnut tri;.: over tin; . and th- ;• would now be worth about ■ 000. at lea<«t; ,<>ver yonder, [ could hove set out an apple <•■> < hard. <if abtii; li'iO < i • •< . .i <• i would bo worth at least S2000 dollars; 1 could have made a box wood inovo over then. v i'b ab» . G00 boxwoods, worth ; i • now; and in ihat co>;* | coui'i have ;»nf t! t, •• i< • k» ■ i»t > a *'• across the brunch and had a full nf f;: h." He t'prjr>f] on tiu* ora? and rod<' or iit flu* next farm I" try to soil tiie farmer <■•>: le i'niil.-t > oi: and ornarm ntals, but times were hard, and there were no sale*. How will i' tako oo-n— and kidp, too—to learn that work and faith, and son. e, and ?o:!. may malic i h«* p'-cynt h-s«»p;. and the t il'.*»»• ill mure hiopy ' rt ... "Wif'v •« VVi M n %«<rlh Curolinaj nu$tbe< .• |ilny-'.'oun'd. it• i«1 «!<> .-;<>rp£' l.ul when peoph- !■ urn whafc they (;in do with it as a work-gfround; ■S en ixini <!oni-comc will bcprin to idpwn on the Blue Kidge and the i Ilal.-am?. "Where were my ancestor* when Manh^ttpn Island wa.- sold ! for a eoortskin?" asked Mark I Twain. Probably running round 11- a- :»ii- , ;iiiibow - somewhere; but I the ancestor.? of Teddy . and Franklin 1). «.'er<» on Manhattan about that ' i f/, buying land and starling fields and stores. SHOE REBUILDING SHOP IN NEW ROOM ' Removal of the English Bros, flint' 'C'luiiMn1"' which has !>• n located in the lie;* buihiini* in a room in .ho Ja« I on building immediately across Fourth avenue from i.h«* post olfit-e was an nounced today. licnioval (if this •h ;.<)(■ - not affect I!»o other shop r: 11»' l>.v Enjrli.-di I'rothi-rs on | North Main s r< 1 near Lewis' 'me. The now «i»arU*»>* of the '■'ourt'i ivnuc slop are much lart'Pt •; th • equipment is of t!••• ALSEA MOVCS SHOP J. T. Aliji'u announcofi today J'Iiiii ; • ha i«moved hi - barber i hop I mi Iho Skyhmd J hotel huihlimr. that his No. 'A ' ;<>:> .'it! iicno'lnrdi operated | i*i a room i.i In* !•' liuildint* • »:;*•» ■ y :p:< i !,v Arthur's I..inch. Mr. \ii><a\- >,'<\ 1 shop - ill < ' niii in ' • :d nation, u i'i v.* <i' • ■ >■: irih avenue 1»-ii ths r. street. IIIB * HAL COCHPAN bj 6pOP(jl SCAT2BO I/'VN fi?r. u. ?. pj- err. \ C . . .'j tiv Ni* s;t rc\:. I-.. (READ IHE h 1 OltY, 'J Hi.:-. ( Oi.OK Tiifc i"* 1I K»w '-'-si,' 7luymilfs all >ti*out (jufio v/i 1 liii'-1>" to look aiiout tli'l tl>' Ulid I'lld I:.'- M '• I Mall '■ ,'1'sj srparaiff~a;d olio. "li' vo :■!! ;*<i toicih'T, \vo v.-iI! i-.\>?:t<* niiH i'i tini« . jf. : >.-■•in ; t<> MO. Lft's hurry, tio.w I : ■(•ml <d walk iii:-, I I hill!. Y»'0 sli' tilil 1 uii." Then Imwy ill, "I ■ tJiat I v .'!! wait i i' iic hero. I'll and (ry to iiixtlc* • ii' old I'rii ml h»ar n»o. !t' lit- ilocy, .'.'• will jippoar." TiiC'i, :is lr_> flopp.-d upon (ho ground, w- ': Souiify ."-lowly Joolirt! inuiiul and ii<'. "It i-; the iimuiiij; vou'ro objecting lo, I foar.'* •a\V/,'HV sun.'," < riv-i C<oo»y. *' know liiiii. II>; nov<.r :;ei ir.s to (/•• ill trim v)h:i f ii«: • is .sow.*! !iin to hr doiii.-. II''il loaf right there*, fit oase. "But conio. tiio irot of us can hike around ; nd ■ ■» where'er wo I• k«■. ! micf-s I'H du my searching •■ ■■ k I ho t :t 11 .\nd Hi" lads ran ln-rc a.id Tin if it'!!'' vofrcs (il •■•! thi ..ir ;i.*1 »ii<' »ji»j ^oo4 t<> (•• I the Mi'<vl Van. • T!ii • "tfor 'limit .in hour or • <i. Tii* ii :-ai<i, "W«-l 1. ! t.(< r v iidir *>a«-k ami j 'in v.fij !• . ;. 'V have done .iil tii.it w<j i"» Ilir.K fli« y v.\ 10 ,u<iii«\ woe ' !>;:.• ■ fui:lid sonio 1:11tia«Ks ;rN.ir; ll. ;i«.iiiiil. They made hiri . :i!,« !' <miou.-. J'• tthem for spell. You cat imagine his sur* ! :; ■ v hoi:. ; <i«io:ily, i i > little <yea discovered Mister Midget Mao. Tiio oth'-iv h> :;rd him yi-ll. Ju re! (')nii; hero? .Vvd found our ftiend! On me you al* way < an Tii-.* other Ttniog .M: i; I up, as surprised a» they could be. ■ilicy found the Midget Mas vai tied :•) .i tree. J.''; smiled hod, "Some of tit.• nnupt wton* k»; > j ia:«.-! tlii. <ia/y trifl: <»u me." (Copyright, 1923, NKA Scrvioe, inc.) (Th- Vi'l'Ar' v!.i:» t.ikcs I Ik* '( i;-i s in hi It'iiili' ill ii;i* II- \C *•?' i s.' " ~j 1 /"'j f p"»' • i y i I lit J CURiVUZ WUKU SELI&'/t.D THAT Al4,%V;Or/-'S STILL BOA-WED OVETP the great plains. ME CAVE LfcWIS ANiD clask explorers, special ir:iTRuc.r;ows TO LOOK FOP. TrI-SE (f (7 AMI/V\ALo. \.v Vv^ Zi', jMC~> i yc <9 1S3T. CY ftEA SW.'Ct INC. fl » T:-iL UNITED STATES' l.'.'vPC P-TS A£OUT 2-OCOCOO POUNDS c'- HUM A /V /j/A/Q. ANNUALLY. (MOSTLY Ci llKE.CE) THE HA'R. IS USED IN THE MANUFACTURE OF PfcbnSS} aom/ ti&k 1—■—— in t4w CJ!V(?AN'^ lou'siana. are the roue win STREETS: NC&TH P£T££'J, SOUTHP£7£A'J, PFTSA'S, PETER'S t\VENOEt PEteR CTPrZ? AS'O P&T&I: STR££T PRE* S-C'LOTH, made from human hair, is used for me exvrac tion of oils from vegetable seeds; * Thor.i Jelferson was preatly interested in nature, and was far ahead oJ his tunc on many scientific problems. He never became so busy with politics tint he did not have some time kit for Ills itndy !j! natuial histo-y., lie was also an inventor . . . rlie pjvw ItiiitJ tlii bwwt ki:<jwa of bin inveutiuiiji
The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 6, 1933, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75