Newspapers / Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, … / Feb. 16, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. VI. KENANSVILLE, DUPLIN COUNTY, N. C, FEBRUARY 16, 1911. NO. 27. We Lead Mhsv We have just received a small portion of our Spring Stock, if you want to see something pretty come in and let us show you what we mean when we say our store IS the " STORE OF QUALITY." .. I '. T ' " - " If you will give us ONE, just ONE trial, you will always be our customer. ' A February eauiiful Residence Cois--50 50--B Situated in the County Seat Kenansville, N. O. Be on hand at A Bag of Gold, Everybody stands an equaD chance MUSIC FURNISHED BY AN EXCELLENT BAND ! wmmm - I.. Hear the Famous 2 BURTONS Sell Lots at the Rate of One a Minute ! ATLANTIC COAST REALTY CO., WASHING-TON. N. 0. A Prosperous New Year The Key to the Door of To-day's Opportunity is A E3a nk Accou We thank our friends for their patronage and good will, and offer our services for the coming years. M. McD. WILLIAMS, Cashier Bank of Faison. JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER GAR LOAD OF American Fence T ' f I I r I I I I llf ILLLLlUXl. d the Hog andjEJS ) Jhe Dollars You, no doubt, are aware that this Fence is made of hard, stiff steel wire, with the best of galvanizing, has the tension curve and hinge joint, which, when pressure is brought against the Fence, it is possible to force the stay out of alignment, and without breaking it. Also notice, between bars stays are perfectly straight and when pressure is removed the entire stay, from top to bottom, springs back to its original position. J. O. HOBNB, - - This is a very broad assertion nevertheless it's so, and not only applies to Quality but to Prices also. AUGTIOM! 2 1st, 10:30 a. m 10:30. We will give away Three Grand Prizes, a Bag of Silver, and One Lot, lutalv S Magnolia, N. G. W of Duplin. V ! 2 The Reason Why The reason why our Glasses give relief to the eyes is because we know where and how to place them. It's our business. Make it your business to see us. Spectacles and Eye Glasses correct ly fitted to your eyes for $1 and up. EYES EXAMINED FREE. DR. VINEBERG, Masonic Temple, WILMINGTON, N. C. Plant Wood's Seeds For Superior Crops Wood's 30th Annual Seed Book is one of the most useful and corn plete seed catalogues issued. It gives practical information about the best and most profitable seeds to plant for The Market Grower . The Private Gardener The Farmer - Wood's Seeds are grown and selected with -special reference to the soils and climate of the South, and every southern planter should have Wood's Seed Book so as to be fully posted as to the best seeds for southern growing. Mailed free on request. Write for It. T. V. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, Rlohmond, Va. . We are headquarters for. Grass and Cloter Seeds. Seed P6 tatoas, Sd Oats, Cow Pas, Sola Beans, and all ram . and Garden Saeds. - 3 ALARMED AT A PLOT TO DESTROY COTTOM Speculators Are Aroused Over Discovery by an Official What one man might do to a south-, era cotton state with a pickle jar, loll of boll weevils was the subject of spec ulative Interest among several cotton operators in New York and produced marked divergence of opinion. The debate was aroused by the report printed in a dispatch from Atlanta, 6a., that Governor Elect Hoke Smith had received definite warning of a plot to scatter boll weevils all over the state of Georgia and Into South Caro lina to ruin the cotton erop. A group of "cotton operators were found chatting together in the lobby of a hotel. AH had read the dispatch from Atlanta' about Governor Elect Smith's discovery of a plot. ... ' "Now, have no opinion as to whether this story from Georgia is true pt not," one of them said. "I am not competent to pass upon that I am only able to say that I am surpris ed that the trick has not been tried already. - Why should a man do it? Well, let me ask you why does a man commit murder for revenge or- for profit? There's your answer. "A man who would plant boll wee vils in a territory free of them would murder his own mother." - " MISS GOULD NOW LADY DEGIES Vivien, 8econd Daughter of Georga Gould, Weds English Lord Thou sand See the Ceremony. Vivien Gould, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Gould and a granddaughter of the late Jay Gould, is now Lady Deeies. The ceremony that united her with Colonel John Graham Hope Horsley-Beresford, D. S. O., fifth Baron Decies, was per formed by Bishop David H. Greer of the diocese of New York. The thousands that gathered in the snow in front of the church had been 1311. by American Press Association. LORD AND LADY DECIES. anticipated, and three hours before the ceremony a hundred policemen were stationed there. Besides providing a heavy guard, the traffic along Madison avenue was stopped. The couple will spend two months on or about the Nile before going to Lon don for the opening of the season that is to be made by the coronation fes tivities. NEXT CONGRESS LARGER. Crumpacker's Bill Increasing House by Fortytwo Members Passed. There will "be 433 members of the house of representatives in the Sixty third congress as compared with 391 In the present house. The bill reported by Representative Crumpacker of Indiana from the cen sus committee providing for reappor tionment on this 433 basis was passed by the house. There was no record vote on the pas sage of the Crumpacker bill, but just previously a substitute offered by Rep resentative Campbell of Kansas pro posing to retain the membership at its present total was defeated, 131 to 171. Count Apponyi, Peace Agent, Here. Count Apponyi, who is one of the most beloved as well as the most hon ored man in the kingdom of . Hungary and one of the strongest apostles for world peace, stepped off the North German Lloyd steamship Kronprinz Wilhelm at Its Hoboken berth and was warmly welcomed. This historic wel come prefaces the tour which Count Apponyi is to make of the large cities of this country as" a preacher of the new doctrme of universal peace. DEATH IN ROARING FIRE may not result from the work of fire bugs, but often severe burns are caus ed that make a quick need for Buck len's Arnica Salve, the quickest; surest cure for burns, wounds, bruises, boils, sores. It subdues inflammation. It kills pain. It soothes and heals. Drives off skin eruptions, ulcers or Iplies.. Only 25c. at all druggists. He who' has many strings in his hands is sure to get his feet mixed up with some of them. i..mm,.:t:fm t- a7? N J ::::: ?w-Ac-:-x;:': x::-i: ::::': i. - " ' - a 1 - TWOiCHlLDREIllf PATOSUlilEllt Ill and Out of WoHMIand ? Wife Turn oritlGaSif Joseph Barrett, on his wy up the states of the apartment Jouse at 750 Fulton street, Brooklyn, stumbled against a man. It was Fraftk Bernard, who lived in the. flat above him. Bav-. rett told his wife, that he . nad met Frank - Bernard- In the bttUway and that he seemed depressed. LViil ' Several hours later. Barrett smelled gas. The odor was hard to-locate. He went np & flight of stairs, and. made sure it came from the Bernard fiat- He tried the doors. All wer;:Jocke4 He went ta his own apartmet and used the. fire escape to the apartment above. In the bedroom. Barrett f ound Frank Bernard, his wife and two small chil dren dead on the bed. Gas' was rush ing from open cocks in the chandelier. Barrett notified the police.: Bernard -and his, wife 'probably had agreed to die together ana. take their children with them. . " '- Frank Bernard was s well known athletic trainer and was known all over the country as an amateur ath lete. He became a professional some years, ago and contested In the Cale donian and Irish-American games and in contests in all parts pi the eountry. Last week Bernard was. ill with the grippe, but he left bis bed to took for a job. -He. could not fllid anything to do, and this, the police believe, is re sponsible for the death of himself and his wife and children.' - r- GENERAL The city 'police and the n FW8 Yale faculty are inves NEWS ' tigating. a snowball HAPPENINGS. fignt aHd near rlot which occurred in York street, the home of Yale freshmen in New Haven, Conn., which resulted in the arrest of four students. Three were taken on a charge of snowballing, which is for bidden by city ordinance,, and another, Frederick Foster Williams of Balti more, on a charge of resisting an offi cer. The other students arrested je re Clarence Clark Prentice of Buffalo, John Lewis Hoffman of Radnor, Pa., and Ralph Wells Wplf of Corcorana Manor, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Colonel George W. Goethals, chief engineer of the Panama canal, who is in Washington, has made the flat declaration that the .isthmian canal will be completed by September, 1913, at a cost of $300,000,000, including all appurtenances, and will put the Te huantepec route, its only" transoceanic competitor, out of business. The ma chines-shops at Balboa, the Pacific terminal the 'cocJiag siwUons at both the Atlantic and Pacific terminals and other supply stations are all Included in Colonel Goethal's estimate. A bank on wheels is the latest In Paterson, N. J. The bank is fireproof and bullet proof and can travel fifty miles an hour if chased-by would be looters. This auto bank is expected to revolutionize the banking business, es pecially in .the outlyipg districts. The portable bank is the . property of a trust company In that city. The cai is fitted up with a desk and office equipment. Including compartments foi books, checks and papers. A solid steel safe is built in one corner of the machine. .Sarah Bernhardt expects to come to America in 1915 to help celebrate the opening of the Panama canal. Mme. Bernhardt made this announcement in a little speech at a reception given in her honor at the National Press club in Washington. The fact that she was with Count de Leteseps, her compatriot, when the first sod was turned at Pan ama had led to the conclusion that she must come back to this country once more when the canal is opened. Representative Mann of Illinois has essayed a new role, that of promoter of-a national moving picture show, to be held in the hall of representatives, at which Colonel George W. Goethals of the Panama canal commission will be the lecturer. Mr. Mann introduced a resolution and obtained the unani mous consent of the house for the per formance. The scenes will - illustrate work on the canal. Andrew Carnegie has offered to give the Plainfield (N. J.) Public library $50, 000 for a new library building.. The details of the proposition will be made public in a few days. The present Public library building was at one time the home of the mayor of .the city. Through his will the dwelling was left to the city for library and reading-room purposes. Dr. Richard P. Strong, a scientist of the bureau of science of the Philippine government, has been directed to go to China to investigate the plague sit uation at the request of the Chinese government Dr. Strong is chief of the bacteriological laboratory at Ma nila and also Is professor of tropical medicine of the University of the Phil ippines. A special from Wheeling says that John O. Schenk, millionaire packer, has filed th& petition in his suit for di vorce against Mrs. Laura Farnsworth Schenk, recent defendant in the fa mous poison trial. Hei names Daniel Z. Phillips of Wheeling, piano sales man, as. corespondent. President Taft arrived in Columbus, O., on hi way . to Sprinrfield, 111., where he will attend the ' lf.bration oi the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, ' bul before he gets back to Washington the president will also have fire some im portant shots in behalf of reciprocity with Canada. OLD SOLDIER TORTURED. "For years i sunerea unspeakable torture from indigestion, constipation and liver trouble," wrote A. K. Smith, a war veteran at Erie, Pa., "but Dr. King's New Life Pills fixed me all right. They're simply great" Try them for any stomach, liver or kidney trouble. Only 25c. at all druggists. A good many who are saying ''cheer up" ought to-cash up. When the- church, acts- like a circus the side shows always -swallow the main tent CRIMES family of seven, AND - including the father, e mother and five chll- CASUALTIfcS, dre was kijjed Dy fl luminatlng, gs in the little home in Pearl place, Philadelphia. The family was. killed by the accidental loosening of a rubber gas tube from a pipe run ning across the main living room. Minnie "was to have been married within a few days. Erwin J. Wider, the clerk of the Russo-Chinese bank of New York who managed to steal $680,000 from the bank, the bulk of which he lost in stock gambling in Wall street, was sentenced to serve fourteen years in Sing Sing. Since Wider was arrested last July he has been in the Tombs, and following his - confession, which fame shortly afterward, his sentencing nasi been postponed from time to time in the hope that he would tell what became of $240,000 that has not been satisfactorily accounted for. : The -same people who crowded Led erman's three rooms on the third floor of the decrepit tenement at 13 Orchard street, in New York, mef there again a few hours later. Saturday was the birthday of both Tfllie and Annie Oer schowitz, Lederman's two boarders. Tillle was nineteen years old and An jiie, her cousin, was seventeen. The last gathering was different, for the two girls were found dead in bed, with gas escaping from the single jet in their room, It wag, probably an acci dent. Peter Putnick, who was arrested in Valhalla, N. Y., as a "fugitive from justice from Cumberland, Md., is hi jail at White Plains. Putnick emptied his revolver at Inspector Burke and officers before he was arrested. He is awaiting - extradition. It is - alleged that Putnick made away with $14,000 while In Maryland. Taking another officer with him, Inspector Burke went after him, but when Putnick saw them coming he fired at the officers. None of the bulletstook efllect Samuel Latina of Pittston, near Wilkes barre, Pa., who was one of the witnesses at the recent trial of a gang of Italian counterfeiters in New York, was shot down near his home and fa tally wounded, the attempted murder being the fate that he had dreaded be cause, he gave evidence against the gang. Since his return home he had gone about armed and had been watchful, for he told his friends and family that the gang had threatened to kill him in revenge. Because she spurned his love and refused , to marry him James Vlasoa, who lived in Seattle, Wash., shot and killed Miss Garna Gillette, a New York show girl, sister of Miss Viola Gil lette, -leading woman with Jefferson De Angelis, who is appearing in "The Beauty Spot" at the Moore theater, and then shot, himself. Mlss Gillette was dead when her body was found in the apartment of Vlasos. He died In the City hospital. After saving three of her five chil dren from a fire which destroyed her home,, Mrs. Peter Ecklund of South Newcastle, Pau, " was- forced to leap from a second story window and re ceived injuries which may prove fa tal. The woman, who is unconscious at the home of a neighbor, does not yet know that the bodies of her four-year-old son Arthur and her - three-months-old daughter are in the ruins. Sheriff Noal Hendley of Cumberland, Md., and John Sweitzer, an aged Ger man, probably will die as a result of a gun battle when officers attempted to serve a writ of ejectment on Sweitzer at his home. Both men are in hospi tals. Sweitzer twice wounded the sheriff. Sweitzer was in turn shot be low the right shoulder by another sher iff. Suffocated by smoke from a burning feather bed, Charles Fisher, a baker, met death in his room in a boarding house at Bradley Beach, N. J.- He was found at the door of the room, evidently having made an effort to escape. There was no mark of fire on the body, and it is quite certain that he died of suffocation. George Spraker, a farmer, was found frozen to death in a snowbank a short distance from Yosts, Montgomery coun ty, N. Y; Men were about to cut a tree when they noticed a f oot protrud ing from the snow in an adjoining field. When the body was drawn from the snow it was found to be that of Spraker. Ten shop employees of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad were torn to fragments and seven others were injured when an engine under repair exploded in the Smithville (Tex.) yards. Besides the loss of life railroad prop erty valued at $20,000 was destroyed. DEATHS Melvme W- De NnTPn a vice president of th vr NOT fcU Er.e Railroad com. PEOPLE. pauy. med at Ho. tel Marseille in New York from heart disease brought on by an attack ol asthma, from which he had suffered for years. Mr. De Wolf entered rail road life in 1873 as agent of the Erie and Pacific Dispatch company. In May, 1893, he was appointed general eastern freight agent of the Erie, and on June 1, 1902, was appointed special agent In November of the same yeai he received the appointment of vice president, which office he held at . the time of his death. Bishop Ozi W. Whitaker of the Prot estant Episcopal diocese of Pennsylva nia died In Philadelphia after a long illness. Bishop Whitaker was born in Salem, Mass., in 1830. He became rec tor of St. John's church at Gold Hill, Nev., in 1863. From there he went to St. Paul's, In Engfewood, N. J., and then back to Nevada, where he was rector of St. Paul's at Virginia City. Upon the death of Bishop Stevens In 1887 he was made bishop of Pennsyl " vania. George L. Peabody, the Boston bank er and clubman, who had been a pa tient in Johns Hopkins hospital, in Great Cement Demand. Two years ago there was an over production of 100 per cent staring ce ment manufacturers in the face, as the estimated capacity of the plants at that time was 100,060,000 barrels per year and the consumption only 50,000,000. Present conditions indicate a consummation of 75,000,000 barrels this year. This increased demand, coupled with the fact that large East ern manufacturers for two years have sold Iarge-quantitier South -and' West at unprofitable figures, has caused the advanoev "Baltimore, the pa.t Uiive weeks, died after undergoing three operations for the removal of a growth iu his head. Mr. Peabody entered the hospital on Jan. -11 suffering wit h an affection of the brain. For several months previ ous to his going to Baltimore he bad suffered from this malady. Three op erations were performed. , Thomas J. Ham, who was probably one of the oldest newspaper editors in the state of Pennsylvania, died at Lakewood, N. J. He was born in Honesdale, Wayne county, Pa., Feb. 20, 1837. He served for two terms as associate judge on the Wayne county bench. For more than fifty years he was. editor and proprietor of the Wayne County Herald. Rear-Admiral Silas W. Terry, TT. S. N., retired, died at his home in Wash ington, following a short .ttack of pneumonia. He was sixty-seven years old. Admiral Terry was born in Wal lonia, Trigg county, Ky. He entered the navy Sept 28, 1858. His last ac tive duty was as commandant of the naval station at Honolulu. He was retired Dec. 28, 1904, Baron Alnerf "SA:-- RethsehildV head of the Austrian branch of the Roths-; child house, died in Vienna. He was born in 1844. e FOREIGN Tne German war ohlce NnTFS nP "has shown its con-iTtcDce-T ttoued confidence in INTEREST. Count Zeppelin's in ventive and constructive ability by or dering from him another dirigible bal loon for use in the army. The pro jected airship will be smaller than the Deutschland, which came to grief last June, but the motors and the power will be the same. It Is reported in St Petersburg that another will of Count Leo Tolstoi has been discovered and that I; prevents the intended disposal of his literary property to hi widow. S-vm after Tol stoi's death a will was found, but the one recently discovered is of later date, it is said, and renders the first one void. The ne-v will, if the reports ae correct leaves all ths grsat author's literary property to trustees, who are Instructed to devote all the profits to the purchase of land to b- divided among the peasants of his old estate. The department of agriculture of Russia has recommended that the gov ernment accept John Hays Hammond's application for a license to construct irrigation works in the southeastern part of the desert of Karakoun, in the Trans Caspian territory. The locality has never been colonized owing to the lack of water. Mr. Hammond proposes to send a special expedition on the un derstanding that he shall receive the irrigation rights and privileges in the region. In Frank Klaus of Pittsburg the members of -the Fairmount Ath SPORTING AFFAIRS. letic club of New York saw a formida ble aspirant for the middleweight championship. Klaus beat Willie Lew ia.of that city into a state of helpless ness in the "sixth round and would doubtless have knocked him out had it not been for the intervention of the referee. Frank Gotch has returned. In Con vention hall at Kansas City, Mo., be fore 5,000 people, the world's champion wrestler sent Americus reeling into the discard in straight falls, the first in forty-two minutes via the crotch hold and half Nelson route and the second in eighteen minutes. A toe hold caused the flop in the second bout While the Gotch of today Is not as good as the Iowa farmer of a year ago, he still looks good enough to best all the wrestlers who have appeared here in the last decade. A sensational encounter is expected when Cyclone Smith of Hoboken and Battling Hurley of Passaic hook up for ten rounds at the Empire club In New York Wednesday night. These whirlwind sluggers met several weeks ago at the Olympic club and pTrfeup a terrific battle, with -Hurley having a slight advantage. Smith has been anxious to square accounts, this new match being the result. The executive committee of the Aero Club of America and the National council held separate meetings to con sider the change of plans and scope of the work of the two organizations. The date of .the International balloon race was fixed , for Oct 9. All chal lenges for the event must- be made not later than March 1. and the teams must be designated sixty days prior to the race. e NEWS OF OUR United States Ambas sador Wilson at the NEIGHBORS. ve8tigating the com plaint of Representative W. Smith of El Paso district that Mexiean troops fired at the Red Cross flag during the fighting near Juarez. Dr. Bush of El Paso reported that he .was fired on several times while displaying a Red Cross flag on the battlefield. Wireless communication between the Aleutian and Pribiloff islands nd the mainland of Alaska and the United States will be established as soon as navigation open's this spring. This was decided upon at a conference between representatives of the war department the navy department and the department-of commerce and labor at -Washington. At present It takes several days for the government to communi cate with parts of Alaska. With the establishment of a wireless service messages can be sent from Washing ton and answered the same day. A bill was- introduced by' the Can adian minister of public works at Ot tawa, who said beavers have so in creased that they are chewing up valuable trees , and building dams throughout the province and that In fact they had regained their ancient ascendancy in the fur bearing world. - SOLVES A GOOD MYSTERY. "I want to thank you from the bot-tom-of my heart" wrote C. B. Rader, of Loulsburg, W. Va., "for the wonder ful double benefit I got from Electric Bitters, in curing me otboth a severe case ef stomach trouble and of rheu matism, from which I had been an-almost helpless sufferer for ten years. It suited my case as though made just for me." For dyspepsia, Indigestion, jaundice and to rid the system of kid ney poisons that cause - rheumatism, Electric Bittere has no -equal. Try them. - Every bottle is guaranteed to satisfy. Only 60c. at all druggists. . - Life Insurance. The best business men and farmers carry life insurance because their mon ey Is safely invested and again their lives are protected in case of death. It makes young men save their earnings for after years, for the rainy - days and for a large estate that in this way is created by a smaller cost than any other way. The Mutual Life, of New York, is the oldest and strongest in America. Get in the best possible com pany when you xlo insure. See Hines, the agent, at Kenansville,. who rep resents the strongest Company of any kind in the world. Men and women should insure while they can and at a lower rate than will ever be offered again. Keep the wolf from the door. Prepare for old age. Be independent in life. Save-a part of your earnings. THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE 7., COMPANY OF NEW YORK, ...y. D. S. HINES. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE BANK OF ROSE HILL at Rose Hill, in the State of North Carolina, at the close of business January 7, 1911. Resources. Loans and discounts 62,831 . 85 Banking Houses, $4,000.00; Furniture and Fixtures, $851.50 , 4,851.60 Due from Banks and Bank ers 5,610.04 Cash items 573.64 Gold coin . . 971.00 Silverjcoin, including all mi nor coin currency 529.42 National bank notes and other U. S. notes 3,575.00 Total $78,942.45 Liabilities. Capital stock $ 10,000.00 Undivided profits, less cur rent expenses and taxes Paid 2,032.77 Dividends unpaid 222.00 Deposits subject to check.. 29,365.25 Demand certificates of de posit 16,516.95 Savings deposits 20,677.71 Cashier's checks outstand ing 127.77 Total " $78,942.45 State of North Carolina, Ceunty of Duplin, ss: I, W. B. Southerland, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. W. B. SOUTHERLAND, Cashier. Correct Attest: 1 W. H. FUSSELL, W. D. HENDERSON, J. C. MALLARD, Directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 13th day of January, 1911. L P. ALDERMAN, . Notary Public. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF The Bank of Warsaw, at Warsaw, in the State of North Caro lina, at the close of business Jan. 7, 1911. Resources. Loans and discounts $ 64,225.53 Overdrafts secured 727.90 Banking Houses, Furniture and Fixtures 2,500.00 Demand loans 2,945.16 Due from Banks and Bank ers 5,144.72 Gold coin 477.50 Silver coin, including all mi nor coin currency 822 . 31 National bank notes and other U. S. notes...- 3,172.00 Total $80,015.12 Liabilities. Capital stock paid in. . . $ 10,000.00 Surplus fund... 10,000.00 Undivided profits, less cur-, rent expenses and taxes paid : 1,482.23 Time certificates of deposit 20,270.54 Deposits subject to check.. 37,598.11 Due Banks and Bankers 181.10 Cashier's Checks outstand ing -. 83.14 Accrued interest due deposi tors 400.00 Total $80,015.12 State of North Carolina, County of Duplin, ss: I, H. F. Peirce, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and. belief. H. F. PEIRCE. Cashier. Correct Attest: S. E.VHINES, H. L. STEVENS, X. P. BEST, . Directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 13th day of January, 1911. J. H. FONVTELLE, Notary Public. My commission expires April 1, 191L AM AUTBROAT ASJD I'JNG TROUBLES SUAfiANTEEO SATSFACTOftV Of? AfOAfsir AtEfUrfOeo JAM ES M. PAROTT, M.' D. KINSTON, N. C. Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Diseases, and General Sur gery. - Office Hours: 2:30 to 5:30 p. m. Sundays by appointment. ' . .. WKOLf2& r TRIAL BOmEfRK
Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, N.C.)
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Feb. 16, 1911, edition 1
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