Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / June 13, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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'liter pa r r JAS. O. ItOl'LIX, EDITOU AND PUBLISHER - r, PUBLISHED MOSTDAYS AKD THPBSPATB 81.00 A YEAB, DTTE IN ADVA:: Volume 27 Wadesboro, N. C, Monsday, June 13, 1910 , Number 5 3BE D3BE Watch Ansonville CI ? If you want a Lot for a Store, If you want a Lot for a Hotel, If you want a Lot for a Dwelling, If you want a Lot for a Factory or Railroad, If you want a Lot for a Blacksmith Shop, If you want a Lot for a Barber Shop, If you want a Lot for a Carpenter Shop, If you want a Lot for a Large Livery Stater If you want a Lot for Any Purpose, In a growing town with rock foundation And grit in its craw, We have the most desirabe ones. Best Located & Most Convenient toRairoad Depot in Town : FOR CASH. OR ON TIME Will Assist You in Building House, if Desired. El Large, Most Beautiful Lot For College FREE to Any : Church or Reputable Person. Ansonville Real Estate Company A; H. RICHARDSON, President and treasurer. EEE DOE E3E3E DBG EK5L&. CU1EB) i Many people have tried so many remedies for eczema without being materially benefitted that they have come to the conclusion that there is no cure for this most distressing dis ease. That this conclusion is erroneous, and that Hobson's Eczema Ointment will effect a cure is shown by the following unsolicited testimonial of Mr. Venable Wilson, who for many years was a citizen of Wades boro. Mr. Wilson says: - , - . i J "This is to certify that for nine years I suffered with eczema, and during that time tried numerous so-called specfics for it, but without effect. But after a few applications of Hobson's Eczema Ointment I was completely cured. "V. WILSON. "Thomasville, N. C, Feb. 22, 1910." We sell Hobson's Eczema Ointment under an absolute guarantee. If it does not effect a cure yo get your money back. PJRS0S DUQ GOPW. i Country Produce f When you have fat Beef Cattle or poor ones, see Martin and Green. We also wish to buy Chickens and Eggs, Hides, Tallow and i Butter, and will always pay the highest mar v ket price. .Martin & Green (Successors to M. B. Howell) Phone 101 ' Putherford St. C. R. HEIKE IS CONVICTED. aria Secretary of Sugar H.flning Camps eatlironOaa Coaat. New', York, June 10. Charles R. Heike, tha white-haired secretary of the American Sugar Refining Com pany, was convicted tonight, on one count of an indictment charging con spiracy to defraud the government of customs duties on sugar., ., Earnest Q. Gedracht, former su perintendent of the WiUiamsburg (Brooklyn) refinery, was convicted or ail six counts. - T For James F. Bendernagel, former cashier of the refinery the jury stood 7 to 6 for acquittal. He will be tried again. - . : This ends the government's second attempt to imprison the group of men responsible for the vast anderweigh ing frauds to which the so-called trust has virtually confessed by the restitution of more than $2,000,000 in duty. ' : Heike is the highest official upon whom the blame has been fixed and he now faces a sentence of tWQ years in the Federal prison and a fine rA $10,000. He is 65 years old and broken in health and spirit. His counsel in summing up declared re peatedly that prison term meant nothing less than death. Convicted on all six counts, Oer bracht can be sentenced to twelve pears in prison and a maximum fine of $40,000. He is 63 years old. All three defendants who were un der-bond, were paroled in the custo dy of counsel until 10.30 o'clock to morrow morning when ' court will bear the usual motion in the cases of Heike and Ger bracht and barring some stay, will announce the time of sentence. The trial which ended to night was started on May 16, with six defendants included in the in dictment. Besides Heike. Gerbracht and Bendernagel, there were three minor employes, Harry W. Walfcer, assistant dock superintendent; and Jeam M. Voelker and James F. Hal- tigao, checkers. The trial had not progressed far, however, when the testimony so incriminated these men that their counsel entered pleas of guilty. They have not yet been sen i tenced. IIIG cue OF SKIM TOR IT URE Slight Red Eruption Grew to be Terrible Sleepless Nights and Restless Days Made Life a Burden Was Completely Discouraged. CUTICURA CURED AFTER 16 YEARS OF SUFFERING ' For sixteen lone rears I have been Buffering with a bad case of skin dis ease, w nua a cxuia there broke out a red sore, on the legs just in back of my knees, caused by a tight, col ored garter. At first it seemed to be a slight affair but grad ually it -waxed from bad to worse, and at last I saw I had a bad skin disease. I tried many house remedies and also many widely known doctors In dif ferent cities but to no satisfactory result. The plague bothered me more TO warm weather than in winter and being on my leg joints it made it impossible for me to walk, and I was forced to stay indoors in the warmest weather. . "My hopes of recovery were by this time spent. Sleepless nights and rest less days made life an unbearable bur den. At last I was advised to try the .Cuticura Remedies and I did not need more than a trial to convince me that I was on the road of success this timo. I bouaht two sets of the Cuticura Rem edies (Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills) and after these were gone I was a different man entirely. - The Cuticura Remedies certainly did a great deal for me. as it changed my whole career from bad to good, l am now tne nappiest man that there ia at least one true cure for skin diseases. Leonard A. Hawtof, 11 Nobtrand Ave.. Brooklyn. N. Y.. July 30 and Aug. 8. 1909." , GET LAND AND HOLD IT. JOHN T BENNETT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. . All legal business will receive prompt attention. Ofllce in the last room on the right hr the court house for the preseut, it being the room heretofore occupied by Bennett & Bennett, Attorneys. For Sale at Grass Farm. Dale JOHN W. GULLEDGE, Attorney aad Counsellor-at-Law and Real Estate Agent, Wadesboro, N. C. All legal business will have prompt and painstaking attention. . Your sales and purchases of real estate may be facilitated by calling on or writing to me. Will also rent or lease your town property and farm ing lands and collect the rent for the same oe over Wadesboro Clothing & faUoe Company's Store. Pnre Bred Scotch-Topped Shorthorn Cattle Bulls, Cows and Heifers. These cattle will be sold at very moderate prices, considering breeding and inviduallty. Write or come and see 8. B. CARPENTER, . Rout 1, Ansonville, N. C. WANTED- Cord Wood, delivered at our brick yard or placed convenient to load on eara. Write us for prices. Watson & Little Brick Co., Cheraw.S. C, R. F. D. No. 1. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs over Tomllnaoa's drug tore. Phone 79. I : .: Wadesboro, N. C. rOESYSniBIIEYKHS H. H. MoLxndoh y F. E. Thomas-. McLendon & Thomas ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW WADESBORO, N. C. All Business will Receive Prompt Attention. PHONE 61. Rest and neaee fall upon distracted households when Cuticura enters. All that the fondest of mothers desires for the alleviation of her skin-tortured and disfigured children is to be found in warm baths with Cuticura Soap and gentle anointings with Cuticura Ointment. Guaranteed abolutety pure and may be used from the hour of birth. Cuttcura Boap 2Se . OtBtnmft (50c.). RMolvrat (50c and Cbocolate Coated Pills 2Sc.. arc sold - throughout tbe world. Poller Drue A Oust. Corp . Bole crop., lil columella Ave, ttostoo. r-Malled Free. Cuttrura Book on lb Curaaf Skua Diseases. 33 pages ol la valuable advice. Cols and Caste When you want a nice Coffin o Casket, at a reasonable price examine the line I carry. I have them from the cheapest to the nest. i llice Hearse W.F.Gray,d,d.s. (0FICX IN SMITH & DUNLAP BDG) ; Wadesboro, N. C. All Operations Warranted Is alwaya in readiness, and even feature of the undertaking bnBi neas receives my careful atten tion, whether day or night l also carry a nice una ol BURIAL ROBES. S. S. Shepherd The Undertaker That Is tb Advice That Sbanld Otv- mm Snn Whit Tasiaat Vmrtum tm b Bomth. : v Bv EL C. Bransoo. Presideot Btate Nor mal ticnool, Aiaeus, ua., in line rro gressive Farmer. May I venture an answer to the editorial inquiry in your issue of the 23rd inst.: "The Land of Opportu nityWho Shall Possess It?" The increased average size of farms In the United States between 18S0 1900; the rapid Increase of large es tates, in many instances more than a ruilliao acres in extent; the bare facts of farm tenancy, and what. la more appalling, the alarming increase of farm tenancy throughout the United States and especially In the South; the beginnings of competitive rents among tenants for - farm hold ings, which will grow greater year by year to the destruction of the ten ant classes, just as in Belgium, Ire land, and England; the pressure of population in the United States (we will have nearly two hundred million people in the United States by the middle of the present century); the inevitable rise of land values (farm lands alone increased six billion, ne hundred million dollars between 1900 and 1905). the commercializine of farm operations for dividends alone; the decay of farm life and farm oper ations under the" tenant system; the decay of rural schools and churches; the high prices for farm products, along with the impossibility of diver sification, intensification and rotation under the iron law of tenancy; the movement of country populations cityward, due to our rising Indus trial city civilization. All these things mean in the South that we are rapidly abandoning our rural regions to a tenant farm class, and whet is worse, ttf a negro tenant farm class, and that our agricultural regions once so abandoned are Irre vocably abandoned; that we are cre ating in the South, and in America for that matter' a population of lack lands and lack-alls who must be more transitory and migratory, with an interest in community life less and less abiding and loyal; that we are departing more and more from our only hope , of .economic safety .and freedom: namely, small land hold ings by independent owners. Hove these plain people on the farms. I am ot their sort. But I fear for them exceedingly, for their children and their children's children as the years go on. Our intelligent farmers need to be just as much con cerned with the economic side of farm life as they are with the agri cultural side. Our educators and statesmen will be obliged to consider all these matters quickly and wisely. Neither America nor the South is immune from the play of forces that have worked the (destruction of the farm classes of Ireland and Belgium. But on tne other band, these same forces intelligently understood and directed may make of the farm re gions of our Southland the agricul tural paradise that we find In Hol laddand Denmark. It is time we were getting ready to answer the prophetic inquiry: Choose this day which economic system ye will serve. We cannot delay an answer to this nuaot rr troPD mimh Innnaw T t da WwDSwu v v- j vav-s-s awugc OUa it will be too late. Our birthright will be forever gone. Now a direct answer to your ques tion. wen in one county of my State six men own one-third of the farm lands of the entire county; in another, one man one-third of the total farm acreage, in another, three men practically the entire county, and so on all over the State; when an Indiana company of farmers buys 21,000 acres of farm lands in the southwestern corner of the State, and another company 33,000 acres in the southeastern corner, and when an other company buys 100,000 acres in the northern end; when two English aristocrats own 1,700,000 acres cf farm land in Florida; when two more aristocrats own 2,000,000 acres in Mississippi, and a little bunch cf aristocrats 3,000,000 acres ln Texas, it seems to me that the people who are going to own our farm land In another generation or two will 'be people of sense, not necessarily peo ple ot heart. The man af sense will own all our Southern farm lands, or nearly so, and we shall have a vast multitude of people scrambling - for a footing upon land just as in other countries or tne world, and to en we shall have all the problems that edu cation, religion, and statesmanship can deal with to the end of time. It ought to be unceasingly thundered into the ears of the farm class: "With all thy getting, get land." And it Is safe to say they will never do it as a great class until they get the neces sary understanding of the profound drifts of things today in American life. : As long as the farm owners in the South find more difficulty in getting good tenants than tenants find in renting land, just so long are we jea sonably free, here and there, from the devilish destructiven ess of competi tive tenant rents; just so long will the land owner be willing to sell and move out of his difficulties, and to sell at a reasonable price to the peo ple who have little money but a great ambition to own little farms of their own. But when In the general increase of population the scrambling for land runs np land values and rents as in other countries, then the economic end of the world will have come for the great masses of . the people who ought to own land and live on it, but who have let their opportunies slip away from them. The htge price of farm products, the sparseness of Southern popula tion, the difficulties here and there of securing good tenants, and the cheapness of our land all 'mean lit erally that now is the day of salva tion. If the poor man down South does pot now own land or does not buy -land, he may never have a chance again. Booker T. Washington sees this problem and he sees It with an un canny kind of Insight and foresight He is preaching to the negroes every where with all the- power of his bouI: "Qet land and get It quick, and hold to It with the desperation of death." And the negroe is getting land in Georgia. He has nearly 170,000,000 worth of it, and has gotten it withfn the last 40 years. . I do hot believe that I am unduly alarmed when I say that the thought ful people of the South of every sort and kind need to wake up to a fateful economic issues and their significance for the generations to come, beeause out of these are the very issues of our social life. A GENTLE TEACHER. Fleetwood W. Dunlap .ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Wadesboro, - - N. C. OSEst ted VI Bar Tmltb Bulldtag. Wanted. An old war musket. and bavonet. used Dy tne Anson uuards from 61-65. a liber price will be paid tor same. Wanted bv son ot Confederate soldier who was-a full I blood Yankee but of the deepest southern principle.- f or further uuormation apply Agrlesltara 1st Bchl. Raleigh News and Observer. The -Farmers' Union is doing a great work in emphasizing the need of teaching agriculture in the public schools and they are receiving the hearty co-operation of the State Su perintendent Joyner and President Hill of the Agricultural and Mechan ical College. At this time there are 25 young women teachers who are taking short courses In agriculture at the A. A M. College, so as to teach agriculture in the schools. They are the pioneers of an army of young wo men who will equip themselves for this practical instruction. President Alexander, of the Farmers' Union, who made a fine speech on this sub ject at the A. & M. College yesterday, urged the importance of putting some practical agricultural articles , in the reading books used by the children In the public schools to the end that they will become more interested in farming. The tendency has been to educate from the farm. This is the new sort of education that Is being encouraged and emphasized, and it will result in better instruction and in making many blades of grain grow where we now have only a few. A Daad ImfaBt. Kinston Free Press. Filled with the importance of be ing about to assist in the unearthing of a mysterious and foul murder, a man went to the sheriff's office this morning and besought him to hurry to the Neuse river, near the Kinston Lumber Company's mill and fish from the waters a supposed murdered infant sewed in a sack and floating in the river. Sheriff Nunn despatched Deputy George Grey to the scene while other gentlemen tried to get into long distance communication with Coroner Green, to have him come down and investigate. ..Deputy George Grey went to the river and hired a colored man to go and br'ng back the body of the murderd child. Cautiously and very carefully he un tied the eack and found a large Tom cat, very dead. No warrant has been issued as yet for the murderer of the Touamie. Youth's Companion. "The schoolhouse should be count ed as a sanctuary against fear," said wise Roger Ascham, tutor of Queen Elizabeth. In the colonial times, however, this precept was almost unknown, for the majority of mas ters ruled by the terror and the use of the rod, and by many ingenious and often cruel devices. Some of these unique punishments are told by Alice Morse Earle, In "Child Life In Colonial Days." To offset the dreary account, however, she describes the quaint and delightfully tender meth ods of one worthy pedagogue. The colonial schoolrooms resound ed with the sjund of the rod. "A besom me of byrche for babes," was the usual, every-day method of dis cipline. Another penalty was to place the culprit's nose in a cleft stick. Two delinquents were often yoked together like oxen. Whispering-sticks were wooden sticks tied in in the mouth with strings, like bits. Culprits were made to sit on the un istool, a stool with one leg, to wear dunce caps, to staDd . in uncomforta ble positions, and to bold heavy weights. One dame made a naughty child bold a heavy book by one leaf the least motion of the child would tear the leaf. This same ingenious mistress also bestowed rewards ot merit, one of which was the division of a strawberry among six diligent pupils. , Samuel Dock stands out a bright and shining light against this dark background cf savagery. Some of his methods are told by himself. "How I receive children in school. The child is first welcomed by the other scholars, who extend their hands tc it. It is then asked by me if it will be industrious and obedient. If it assents, I explain how it should behave. When it gets as far as a-b abs, its father muat give it a penny and its mother cook it two eggs, be cacse of its industry." Master Dock himself gave his pu pils little presents as they worthily progressed. He did not teach his little folk thecatecbism, but he made them learn what he called "The bright, living, flowers of the New Testament." His schoolroom must have been a paradise in those days of harsh discipline. HISTORY 07 THE KISS. The further away we journey from the days of Eve, the more assiduous ly the world seems to have cultivated the habit of kissing, says Carl Holi day In June SmartseL In other words kissing is a mark and test of civilization. Before the coming of the white man it apparently was to tally unknown among the Indians of America and the savages of Africa and Australia, but who shall trace its beginning among the people of Eu rope and Asia. As far as we may go among these ancient white na tions we shall find no age when this highly unhygienic practice "was not popular. Indeed Darwin attempts to trace it back to the habit our bob tailed ancestors had of grasping prey with their teeth. This business of osculating be came so popular among the Greek that it is said many husbands, be fore stating out for the day's work compelled their wives to eat garlic a most effective prevention, we can not doubt. The Komans attempted to be more cold-blooded and dignified. They were at least more systematic, for they divided all kisses into three kinds, the osculum, the kiss of friend ship, the basium, the kiss of ceremo ny, and tne savium, the kiss of love. AH of which simply implies that the ttomaos bad three chances to our one. The ancients, however, were not in favor of public disp'ay of the business, spooning waa decidedly in bad form. Plutarch says that Cato expelled the Senator Manlins for kiss ing his wife in the day time and in the presence of his daughter. This same Plutarch is our authori ty for the statement that Roman found the now antiquated custom of wives saluting their husbands with a kiss. The women, after sailing many seas and reaching this place, refused to follow their husbands further and under the leadership of Roma, a "new woman," burned the ship. Then sys the historian, Rama Invented this pleasant method of appeasing the wrath of their husbands, and the remedy has been used with consider able efficiency unti' comparatively re cent yearn. ahhxios for his nenrer- Ta Ximm Sstsdaj School CeavaaUloa. Mr. Editor: Please allow me through your columns to speak to Sunday School Convention. Superintendents, teachers, officers, and members, pastors, deacons, and members of the churoh, to you Is this epistle sent. Will you pause a mo ment and look at the vast need of Zion? The year is fast ebbing away, and before another eventful call to you for the church's great duty in her own midst you mey be called to account for life's service. Remember that the other meetings have passed into history. They have made their calls to yen, and whether you have answered them manfully is for you and your conscience to decide. There is no meeting in tne year that means so much to us in the arrangement of our educational work. There is also no meeting whose sitting is in such a splendid time of the year as to allow us to loot backward and rorward and see so much to inspire us to action as the Sunday school convention. Now, brethren, you want -to be gloriously represented, and to fail at this particular meeting will perhaps cast a greater shadow upon your life than any other neglect of duty since your conversion. We have much to place before this approaching con ven tion that means much to the uplift of ourselves along Christian ana educa tional lines thai only requires . us to be fully represented, with the obliga tions of our members thrown off, to properly sieze them and carry them into effect. We call upon the sisters and brethren to lay bold with a deter ruination that knows no failure and come up to the convention with smile. J. F. Davis, Pres. o)ir1r' A Woaaost Groat Ida is how to make herself attractive. But, without health, it is hard for her to be lovely ia face form or temper. A weak, sickly woman iTUl be nervous and irrita ble. Constipation and Kidney poisons show In pimples, blotches, skin eruptions and a wretched complexion. But Electric Bitters always prove a godsend to women who want health, beauty and friends. They regulate Stomach. Liver and Kid neys, purity the blood, give strong nerves bright eyes, pure breath, smooth, velvety skin, lovely complexion, good health. Try them. 60c. at Parsons Drug Go. ii is now a summer as well as a -winter remedy. , It has the same ir!?'3oratinjr and strength-proelw--? ef fect in summer as in r. - Try it in a little cold milk &x iBfataOsg Him. At a Manchester meeting the other day Earnest bat Prosy Orator I want land reform; I want housing reform; I want educational reform; I want Bored. Voice Chloroform. Manchester Guardian. water. all Err-'-crrr wouia you nave better health, more strength, clearer akin, stronger nerves. more elastic step? Use HulUster's Rocky ioiiuitUa lea, I'ua great vegetable Regu' tor and tonic. Oae J3e p.i.-ka,?e maV Kept tha Klag at Hons. "For the past year we have kept the King of all Laxatives Dr. King's New Life Pills in our home and they have proved a blessing to all our family. writes Paul Matbulka, of Buffalo, N. Y. Easy but sure remedy tor all Stomach Liver and Kidney troubles. Only 25c at Parsons Drug Co. Baackall Roots tha Hookworm. Mother's stalwart and manly son, who hasn't bad enough energy to cut a turn of wood, mow a lawn or beat a carpet since last fall, is just full now manifesting sym toms of renewed vitality by being able to knock the ball over the fence and make home run. Albany Herald. Breathe tocure Jlj ljuL No stomach doting -breathe the pleasant, heaUng, gnia-kii'ing ail oi Hyomevandem CATUtXH. COUCIS. CCLCS. CSSIT. song thkoat. tioscHrns. trc Complete outfit, including hard ruLlxt io. halt. $1.00. oa moaey-batk pUa. Extra bottle 53c. ' Drck;'-iseve"y ,.-je, ssui I f Washington, Jane 8. That a c million in cash would be only a f.. ' reward for Richard Parr, the coster.-, agent who, by his dauntless eULrl at the risk of his life, exposed t!-- weighing frauds of the Sugar Tru-t, Is the opinion today of many Trt-di-ury Department officials and miny others high in the Government. Parr refused an oflkr of 1100,000 ta disappear by the Sagar Trust, and re covered for the Government between three and four million dolllar3,whieh had been fraudulently withheld, aad put nearly a dozen conspirators be hind the bars. Officials here declare that Parr'a work should be held np to tha youth ot America as a shining example of what one honest maa can do. They say . that the Government could not be too liberal in the caae; that money could not be better appro priated than in establishing the fact that Uncle Sam will pay as high a price for fearless, straightforward honesty as any ruthless trust will pay for dishonesty, expert chicanery or deceit. Attorney -General Wickersham has decided that Parr alone Is entitled to the reward. Secretary of the Treas ury McVeagh asked Parr to come here next week. At that time Mc Veagh will fix the amount of the reward. Varaottoal Lsts Caaaos Two SotcJalcs. Chicago, June 9. Unrequited love is believed to have prompted Frank I. Campbell to slayIiss Lena Han sen and kill himself last night. At a lonely spot In the south western part of the city Mi3s Hansen was shot twice while on her way home after dark Campbell with a photograph of the woman in his pocket was found early today Bhot to death about 500 feet from where Miss Han sen met death. He was 31 years old and she was two years younger. Aids Nature The great socoess ol Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery ia curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, weak lungs, and obstinate and lingering cough, is based oa the recofaitiea g the fundamental truth that "Goldea Medical Discovery" supplies Nature with body-build-in , tiau-repairinf, muscle-making materials, ia con densed and concentrated form. With this help Nature supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest food, build up tha body and thereby throw off lingering obstinate coughs. Tha "Discovery" re-establishes the digestive aad nutritive organs ia sound health, purifies aad enriches tha blood, aad nourishes the nerves in .short establishes sound vigorous health. romr sfMe offer aomefnfn "oaf am tfoof. it ia arobablr ottr FOB Hlhtlt aara betfr. Bat ram ara talakiai at tha eura mat tha profit, am tMara'a matkiag "Just ma tfeo4" tar yam. Say a. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, Ia Plata English; or. Mod. ieiuo Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-dace Edition, pa per-bound, seat for 21 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing Wjf. Cloth-bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. We Have Just Received a Solid Car of Cookin: toves From Nashville, Tenn. Wc have been handling the Nashville line for the past two years, and find that they really give better satisfaction than any other stove on the market for the price. Our Stoves Are These stoves come in all The Art Enterprise, sizes from 15 inch to 20 The Live Oak, inch ovens in Nos. 7's and The Square Enterprise and 88. Complete list of The Square Oak; ware goes with every stove National Range. or range sold. If you want a cook stove and want something that is really worth your money, we have it for you and we guarantee to save you from $2.00 to $5.00 on your purchase in the same quality of goods; and besides you get with every stove a written guarantee signed by the president of the factory and countersigned by us their dealers. There is only one thing for you to do wh want a stove or range, and that is to look ours over and you'll be suited.' QifftKJQs FuQrj. Go. as you "Ths If cue 2 cf Quality.1 Lc
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 13, 1910, edition 1
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