Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Aug. 31, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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'4 ? f QC CACCA01AJ3 :! i. T .1 I1 ; " t: : t. - i , . ' i ... ; ft VI? i t ! ' , t i 1 ! - t i J -. 1 ')'' - . ' '8', . ,ff .i 1 J:.i L ' ' 9- 1 M i .1 ! t'i . i ! - li ft I !;- ; .Iff. a-! 5 aHMawv mi s State Netfs. Revenue officers In Iredell County bare discovered that iteel trapt are being ued by the moonsblnert. John Crockett. fourteo-7ar-ia, General TSIetfs, wm:cK- was killed by lightning In the vicinity Af rharloffj & few d&ra so. He tandinr ondtr a bkkory tree which vac tmck br the Itehtnlag. Ten penocj were killed in a ato- , mobile accident at New.Caft!e. Eajc. jABcbester, K. Y.. Ac Uarglara entered the itore of Shr-j rand Saturday. f Sfwding eastward behind Use. AgHwitrml Trrr wirin. colored, of Sco! City, and carried away a quantity of j Sixty peraosi were Injored In alo a fpr4 OB a tfTMlU stArj land Neck waVahot and killed by an- pistols and other useful tbinga to he, wreck on a raiiroaa iram near hr to-day and two day coaches froa ;,,hr' n.' Um, Saturday night. i found In such an establishment. dletown. Conn.. Sunday. i the rear ttfoa 0f the train planged ". 1 - - - V. M M . . . 4. Farm Topics John Warren Elizabeth City day while bathing Uiver. I downward forty feet, spiking tbetj an ebj i a nesro butcher of Xhe Boone correspondent of tbe J. Frank Skinner, the tallest Ukwt embankment like a par of pro-!"1 ; was drowned Mon- Hickory Democrat says that J, M.'m the world, died at his home in Au-j jCtileJt. In in tbe Iasquotank! Smith, a Wataugua armer. lost nine : gusta, Ga.. a few days . He was Q tBe awfal pjticge and crash all I head of cattle by lightning on a re-5sTen feet and four inches high. least thlrty-seten persons are to-!. " cent Sunday. They were valued at .v, i,...t tTtJiA mills Inil3S0. 5 The Seaboard Al lrt Itty Othw Voa4c4. iMsmtsi 23L f tirfAi-unral fMagSei IHUrreat Owvef CVop fe tHJfrrei Soils m! Cliwatew. The asprecedested drouth which preTaiis Is some sectloas of the SAate Is an object lesson as to tne raiae 01 matter or husius in the soil. well-known fact that In ad AMnn la other desirable aaiitles de- Wtters Weekly t. ,j dosat took g sk1 t t t rabbiag it la oa '-' ;;r a sac i pi the pie rots years as 4 tarn looe Ctilld tewK4 la Tmh 4 tt Greenville, a C. AeS t . playtttg about a tab c? afternoon. LectU. tb it &a tbe Upper Carollnas, which are at Anderson, S. C. have closed down for lack of water. Cotton men In Charlotte have es-j given a preliminary bearing last: tlmated that the crop In Meckienourgi weex ana neiu iur ci County will be 10,000 bales short ofipenlor Court without ball. the average crop persons are -ir.rin. nrrmfiie matter or humus ln-i rfAnrhtrr of Mr 't l-k. K.1U n K&jn . , . . I ' f lk.. Air U'ae iaopi i; mnr fhan mixtr laiard. Th T I "77 " . . V " . - " - 511 s-IT. Mt Ih . a -s- ...... . .. ,.,,i t i tnn . . . ror me prutcvuuu i'jeacro5i. io. :j lata . J. U .Norri, cnargea wun me nigci. iuro.uS wu. " it U reareo: tney win aie. . HiAatru rf-l ... '5 i ing of J. B. Blstett near the city lim-;out of employment. Tne loss was Its of Raleigh some weeks ago, wasUbout $100,000. 5 t.mrM. rtintt the disastrous ef'l i !r .c . Uects of a possible droutb next sua- .hnnld nut in wiater-i r.M w.t - -f.. A .W. . . . l&ls state, ana one oi too most aisas-' Th Wf. rroxtg f0f tlsl Bob Allen, a prominent farmer who ;trotJ1 eTer recorded on the sysumj t J cIo,er, Teube. and Dura . r m w ..... ' Duricse are tne clovers, Teicae. ai mer. i purpose ar urea ner ; crowuea wun passengers, many oi " n iaril vherl Afie !! . . k w ti.umin. catnrHflv nftrnTMin while . I. , . I small grain crop, on una wnerei Aner an. mere i aotku . u y v. wnom were war Teieiani s.nu eitui - . .i -.. i . , . . . . - a ThrMrfrar.i.t.fRUrllnetofi were! Undine a meeting of the Farmers'; "I,... frnm n a n Pnftmnmonti clovers ana Teicaea KMWnw Uu. . . -00-- " - - '""" ..f,,ii th. r rkiT4r lain rre on mit i n rir n t . . ; vvve j v. I ' " 4 1 StSjn' Th Fayetteville Observer states ; arrested last Thursday by Federal of-j Tobacco Association that thP Aberdeen and Rocknstt nciais cnargea wun uaviuK uu i.w at Rochester. i . . . . . i i I Railroad will be extended to Fayette-1 mucn aiconoi iu yrepanug uiv.uc. vllle In the near future. IThey were required to pay a penalty ; and take out whiskey license. Durham County Superior Court convened Monaay wun one uuumeu ' w . , . ; k- r r cases on the docket. Most of tne loaaea wun men oi ipe umvw rouiea, auu Kuu.. . -C . cases are for selling liquor. Oiner sman crsia tiuj-s. v v , i j tuu huhiui y uu. Dft.9.tCr.r..npral Hitchcock will!, . ! they will not grow it will be advisable i UHlt."."- " l. J, iIVTl lI 1 IIBUU , .Tk -! ,HA c.sthlithment of si . c s to sow rye. parcels post service when Congress! r W XJtn (ilt'i la Arst i nv r. i rested on Serious Charge, j o refuUj the crops should tt COTHE UALC 1MVI irHtU Wilson, X. C, Aug. 29. Consta-1 be put In as quickly as possible, eapeiaw-naf- wwmtftvwto,.. , ... . j v - - , . - - H.H.!..ftf)WilMi ,i , to establish this service in the rural karris, on a warrant sworn i ctauy in me wesiera vn o. .ur iXns la u kt&m w , .- out by Mrs. W. O. Berfleld before PreDare the land by disking and har-limits, to write to hrr t a I t2 loaded wun men oi ipe uniiea aiaiesi routes, ana grauuauj c--v Wj - - - - I tw:tbjn rrt-aortllT cor dsjatii JZr navy, passed through Statesville early urban communities if it proves satis- Squire John F. Shackleford, in Wal- rowing and sow 15 pounds of clean AUttt!ZJ" ! Sunday morning. They were being j factory, and subsequently will Include j wuurr Ar!" . . r..( t m hA 1 Mantle trt Ini! llirotf tra nsnnrfatl on. 13 ual meeting oi me siaivt uauoicucu nuw w . ia ,.... A. M. which met; Pacific Coast. Statesville LanamarK. The ann -Council of J. O. U in Asheville this year, will be held in Raleigh the coming year. Mr. Albert C. Vaughan, who lived on Col. Benehan Cameron's place at W. C. Powell, a farmer who lived near Aurellan Springs, Halifax Coun ty, was found dead by the roadside a few days ago. He was enroute to teen-year-old daughter, defendant l - .... . S A. Stagville, Durham County, died sud- j Littleton, ana wnen seen iau -.i pJm.v mnrnin. of heart fail-! was under the Influence of liquor. UCU1J I-- .. . ...... - . ' . . ... . E. R. Wrlgnt, a young man oi gen teel appearance, was arrested in Wil mington Monday for deserting from the United States Army. He will be taken to Fort Caswell for trial. Wright formerly lived near Greensboro. Mrs. Geo. F. Seitzer, of Wilming ton, fell from a two-story window one day last week and received in juries resulting in her death a few days later. Prof. J. M. Bandy, a well-known civil engineer, and at one time pro fessor of mathematics at Trinity Col lege, died at his home in Greensboro on the 23rd. A stock company has been organ ized at Henderson, for the purpose of manufacturing automobiles. Messrs. R. J. Corbitt, Augustus Zollicoffer, ! Samuel Peace and W. A. Hunt are The Southern Nurserymen's Asso-'ithe incorporators. Capital stock, $25, ciatlon held their annual meeting inoOO. Greensboro last week and selected Augusta, Ga., as the place of their next animal meeting. Mr. J. T. Farmer, of Elm City, was killed Saturday night by either fall-jMonday afternoon, died Wednesday ing or jumping from a Coast Linejas a resuit cf his injuries. Tate train between Wilson and Elm City. , made his escape. "Bob Thompson, who was shot by a man named Joe Tate at the deep cut on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, two miles from Murphy, Georgia leacon Shot and Killed a Brother Deacon. Ashburn, Ga., Aug. 26. R. G. Whiddon, a well-to-do farmer and a church deacon living near here, to day shot and killed J. M. Lawson, a neighbor and also a deacon, at a church on the Whidden farm, and thert-committed suicide. Whidden, it is stated had quarreled with other members of the church and the pas tor, the Rev. Duncan Massey, over a trivial matter, and had sworn that the pastor should not preach in the church again. To-day was the regu lar day for services at the church. Whidden is said to have armed him self with a shotgun, proceeded to the church, where the Rev. Mr. Massey had not arrived. Seeing Lawson, Whidden opened fire on him, killing him instantly. Returning home he locked himself in a room and killed himself. Whidden was in Ashburn yester day and bought a coffin. Several years ago he built a vault near his home to receive his body when he died. j was arrested here to-night by Sheriff Sharpe. Brown admits that he knows the young lady and that the knowledge was mutual. The young man was taken back to Walstonburg on the 11 o'clock train to-night. Tobacco Farmers to Pool 1011 Crop. crimson clover seed per acre, and if jtiee. Yvucttre itNrtMMWtMwuunt convenient, sow also 300 pounds of wui itt?r--oo eir cf cUtjue bm. acid phosphate per acre, as that win rtv. um tt tM w.. 17 help to insure a stand of clover. Some! ttc tc tkxl and fcru-kurtt u rr-. ra sow in addition to this one pound of vu.ijwrr iru. turnip seed per acre, preferably the! u. bummers, Zfe fi, -1 Tu Cowhorn variety, claiming that tne turnip leaves protect the young clover plants in their early stages. It can do no harm to sow the turulp seed as these crops are Intended to plow under next spring to Improve the soil. The seed should be covered with a cultivator or with a harrow about Norfolk Southern Railrozj rtOCTTJ OF THE "XIGIIT express.- In attempting to escape from the1 convict camp, near Wilmington, Sat urday, Ernest Jenkins, negro, serv-! Ing a term of two years, was shot by two guards, and is in the hospital in a serious condition. Mr.-W. A. Elliott, a dairyman liv ing near Lenoir, in Caldwell County, was fired upon in his home by some unknown party last Friday night. The ball passed through Mr. Elliott's hat and clipped his hair. Chief-of-Police S. M. Dickens, of Weldon, and his brother, Lonnie Jones, have been found guilty of causing the death of George Jones at Weldon, March 25. Both defendants were let off with a fine and cost. A large barn, owned by L. B. Wright, near Landis, Rowan county, was burned Friday night, entailing a loss of about $1,000. With the barn was burned two fine mules, a num ber of vehicles, a lot of feed stuff and wheat. , James McNeal, a colored employe at a brickvard in East Spencer, Row an County, was instantly killed Thursday afternoon. While digging near a high embankment several tons of earth caved in upon him breaking his neck. Will Wralker. a grandson of old Aunt Hannah Jnes, of Stanly Coun ty, who was murdered Sunday night of last week by being thrown in an old well, was arrested Thursday and lodged in Stanly County jail, charged with the murder. HcTrace Gentry, who is In jail at Durham for stabbing Walter Stan burg some days ago, attempted to commit suicide Saturday night by cutting his throat'with a razor. His nerve failed him, however, and he did not finis hthe job. The Statesville Lumber Company's . plant was destroyed by fire Saturday. Los3 about $8,000, with $5,000 in Insurance. Hyman Harrison, son of N. Harrison, ran to the scene of the fire from over town; became over heated and died as a result just as he reached the scene of the fire. Greensboro, N. C Aug. 25. At aj secret session of the six hundred far-j more and tnharrn mwprn nf X'nrth: . ,,.,,. . ,v, P, .! one inch deep. In the western part Carolina and Irginia In the Grand! .,. X , ... . . , v, , ., tof the State these should be put in at J i,,tinr, pnm m 1 1 1 oo f9vnrin,hfe so as to make sufficient growth ,t . a ! to withstand the winter. In the cen- ine pooling vi ine 1311 crtrp auui - holding for better prices was unani mously adopted. Travel via Raleigh (Union Suttos) and Norfolk Southern Railroad to and From All Points U Eastern North Carolina. Will Try to Boom La Follette. Duluth, Minn., Aug. 26. A num ber of middle States leaders of the progressive Republicans have receiv ed invitations to attend a State "pro gressive" banquet in Minneapolis, September 7th, at which a State boom for Senator LaFollette of Wis consin for President is to be launched. The September term of Harnett County Court will convene at Lilling ton next Monday. Zack Marks, who was recently brought from Milton, Florida, on charge of a murder com mitted in Harnett County years ago, will be tried during the term. Sheriff Lane, of Chatham County, captured a still and complete outfit on the 28th, near the home of Henry Handcock, who has been wanted for nearly cutting to death a man named Smith whom he thought reported him some months ago for blockading. An election was held in Durham County Tuesday on the question of establishing a farm life school in" that county. The measure was defeated by an overwhelming majority. A movement is now on foot to establish a private farm life school in that county. H. F. Starr, of Salisbury, was awarded $2,800 damages against the Bell Telephone Company in Guilford Superior Court last week. WTheni Tobacco Trust Sued for $300,000 for Entering Conspiracy to Restrain Trade. New York, Aug. 28. Judge E. Henry Lacombe, in order issued to day in the U. S. Circuit Court, al lows the Metropolitan Tobacco Com pany an extension of ten days to plead or make motions in reply" to John A. and Elma Locker, doing business as L. Locker & Company. In the action damages aggregating $300,000 are asked under the Sher man anti-trust law. It is charged that the Metropolitan Tobacco Com pany, American Snuff Company and Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Com pany entered a conspiracy to ruin the Locker business, which was valued at $100,000. Threw His Sweetheart Overboard. Holland, Mich., Aug. 26. Anger ed, he says, because his sweetheart broke her promise of marriage, Wal ter Hopper of Chicago and Philadel phia attacked her on board the steamer Puritan in mid-lake to-night and tossed her overboard. Her body has not been recovered. tral part of the State they should be put In not later than the last of Sep tember, while in the eastern pnd warmer sections of the State they can be put in as late as the middle of October. In the Coastal Plain section bur clover is also fine for a winter cover crop. The seed of this Is usually pur chased in the rough or bur and SCHEDULE IN EFFTICT JUXE iL N. B. The following schedule U- ures published as InfomaUoa oalj, and are not guaranteed. Trains Leave Ra!4gh 9:15 p. m. Daily ''Night Ex press, Pullman Sleeping car ror Norfolk. 6:16 a. m. Dally for Wilsos, should be planted at the rate of from! Washington and Norfolk. Broff ! Frost and Ice Kills Wheat in Mani toba. .Winnipeg, Man., Aug. 2 8. Ice formed last night and six to eight de grees of frost was reported from all parts of a large wheat-growing area in Alberta and Sackatchwan. The loss in these; provinces is said to be great. three to four bushels of the burs per acre, and covered about one inch deep. These should go in at once. Acid phosphate can be used with these to advantage. Hairy vetch also makes a fine win- Parlor Car service between IUle'4 and Norfolk. 6:15 a. m. Daily, except Sasdiy, for New Bern via Chocowinlty. ?t lor Car service. 3:00 p. m. Daily, except SzsUj. ter-cover crop, and will succeed in al-j for Washington. Birmingham Votes Saloons in Prefer ence to Dispensaries. Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 25. Jef ferson County yesterday voted to re turn to the legal sale of liquor by li censed saloons by a majority which may go above 2,000. The voters also passed on the ques tion, wet or dry, but there was never Starr lived in Greensboro lightning! any doubt of the county's going wet 6et an Atlas Free. j Send us four new subscribers toj The Caucasian and we will send you a copy of Hammond's Modern Atlas of the World as a premium. See large announcement on page 3 of this paper. most any part of the State on well drained land, especially where Part ridge or Mountain peas grow. If sowed alone, sow at the ratt of thirty pounds of seed per acre, and if with rye or other small grain, one bushel of small grain and twenty pounds of vetch per acre. They should be sow ed at about the same time as crim son clover and covered from one to two inches deep. WThere none of these crops will grow successfully, sow rye at the. rate of one and a half bushels per acre. You want a heavy growth to protect the land and to add a great quantity of vegetable matter when turned un der next spring. Trains Arrive Raleigh 7:20 a. m. Dally 11:S0 a. s. daily except Sunday and 8: IS p. a. dally. Trains Leave Goldsboro 10:15 p. m.Dally "Night Ex press" Pullman Sleeping Car for Norfolk via New Bern. 7tl5 a. m. Dally for Beaafort and Norfolkr Parlor Car betseea Washington and Norfolk. 3:20 p. m. Dally for New Bers, Oriental and Beaufort, Parlor Cr Service. - For further information aad reser vation of Pullman Sleeping Car Turn under two or three weeks be- 8Pao' aPP to fore you wish to lant the crop which I D. V. CONN. General Agent. is to follow. Rye. especially, should I Raleigh, N. C. not be permitted to get woody before W. R. HUDSON, W. W. CR0XT0N, General Supt. Gen. Pass. AgU Norfolk. Virginia. ran in his house over a wire, which he claimed he had ordered removed, and he was injured. Buford Miles, of Chesterfield Co., Va., a young man of about thirty years of age, attempted suicide in the jail at Goldsboro a few days ago. He had eloped from Petersburg with a young girl nineteen years of age named Bowles, whose father had come in search of the couple and had them arrested. Bowles was reported to have a wife and three children in' Petersburg. Quite a little excitement was cre ated in Salisbury, at the 'Southern Railway passenger station when train No. 43 arrived and Miss Ellen Honey cutt, who was attemtping to elope with a young man named Crawford, was taken from the train by her fatW er and mother. They had boarded the train at Spencer, but the parents in some way had gotten wise and met them In Salisbury. 'a he issue was really between saloons and dispensaries. Jefferson County first voted on the ! turning under. Better turn it under j as soon as the heads begin to appear SFrvi excursion TO NIAGARA than to wait until iUis grown. If it ij.t to ' j gets full grown and dry weather fol- Vorfolk Southern Offers Another Six- lows lt would leave, the land so open teen-Day Trip, Starting September j and loo3e that the crP following it 7th. Leaving stations and depots along prohibition question October 2 8th, the line of the Norfolk Southern on 1907, when prohibition carried by aj Thursday, September 7th, so as to irkT-itTr nf 1 8Q(! connect with one of the several boats ' . leaving Norfolk at 6 p. m. that night, j - , . , the late vacationists will find the spe- agination Made Compulsory for ; . , . c a ,r a cial excursion arranged by the Nor- Every Soldier in U. S. Army Under! ., ... . x;. . l folk Southern to - Niagara Falls and Forty-Five ears. ! . . . . t return another chance to visit Amer ica's greatest wonder, and incidental- W. W. Strain was arrested in Wil mington Friday night at the request of the sheriff of Macon County, Ga. j He is wanted there for a felony. He was arrested at the home of his mother-in-law Mrs. Anna B. Dudley, who is a great granddaughter of Ex Gov. Dudley, of North Carolina. Postmasters of th second, third and fourth classes in the State are granted a leave of absence for as many, days, not exceeding five, as may be ijecessary ; to enable them to at tend the annual convention of the North Carolina State League of Post masters, to be held In Asheville Sep tember 19; 20 and 21. - Mother of Mrs. Marion Butler Dies at Eliott. Clinton, N. C, Aug. 23. Mrs Cor nelia Happer Faison, widow of the late Happer Faison, died at her home at Elliott to-day. She was Miss Cor nelia Happer of Virginia before mar riage and possessed rare intellectual endowments. She leaves an only daughter, Mrs. Marion Butler, of Washington, D. C, who was present when the end came. She had .been in declining health for the past few years and her death was not unex pected. The deceased lady had been rom early womanhood a devout mem ber of the Episcopal Church and her funeral will be held to-morrow from St. Paul's Church here and the inter ment In Clinton Cemetery. - Washington, D. C, Aug. 28. Vac cination against typhoid fever was made compulsory to-day for every of ficer and enlisted man in the United States army under forty-five years old. The only exceptions allowed by ly the places of interest en route re turning, with various side trips as desired. f Taking the choice of boat routes j from Norfolk to either Washington or the War Department's order in the I Baltimore, the special train leaving matter are those who have had the ! Washington at 7:45 on the morning would suffer more than if no rye was put on the land. f A11 these -crops should be disked well and thoroughly cut un before' ; plowing under next spring. Good re sults may be expected only when they are well mixed with the soil before the crop is planted. If any one doubts the benefits tot be had from these winter-cover crops! let him prepare one acre of average! land and treat it as described above. Next spring plant another acre by the side of it that has had no winter cover crop and cultivate both aike. On demonstration like this will usu ally convince a person of the value of winter-cover crops. dsease or who vaccinated. have already been Maryland Democrats Select Gorman as Gubernatorial Nominee. Baltimore, Md., Aug. 29. Returns from to-day's Democratic 'primary election in Maryland, indicate that State Senator Arthur . Pue Gorman, son of the late United States Senator Gorman, will be tne nominee of . the Democratic party for Governor at the November election. WORK BROUGHT EXHAUSTION. Adel, Ga. "For three years," writes Mrs.' C. J." Rentz, "I suffered with female troubles. When I would lie down. I could hardly breathe. I could not do any work without being exhausted. I took CarduT according to directions, and now I can do all my work, and do not suffer at all. Cardui has brought health and happi ness to thousands of weak women. It acts on the cause of women's backaches, v headaches, nervousness, dragging sensations, weakness "and misery. It relieves. It cures. , Try it of August 8th, and Baltimore at 8:40 for anr of the above-mention- w - . -.. " --mm eu croya can oe naa irom almost any reputable seed man, but buy only the best and freest from impurities. The best are none too good. T. B. PARKER, Director Co-operative Experiments, N. C. Department of Agriculture. a . f . - a. m., win connecr ai v nnaaeipnia with the Philadelphia and Reading, and arrive at Niagara Falls that night at 11 p. m. over the route of the Lehigh Valley. Te side trips possible to Toronto via Lewiston, Thousand Islands. Mon treal, Quebec, and stop-overs possible returning at Buffalo, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington give a va ried choice of journey to all, under the most favorable conditions, going and coming. ' .j . Every one has heard of the won ders of Niagara -the Gorgem and Whirlpool Rapids, and so on. At Toronto, which is but a short ride beyond by boat from Lewitson, is an Ameriean-English city, that is a bee hive of industry, and interesting his torically. The hotels of Toronto are far-famed for their goodness. Trol ley rides out East . and West King Streets, and In other directions, give the traveler a very good idea of To ronto. , -Full Information .and round trip rates from each point on the Norfolk Southern may be obtained from every ticket agent at every station. Cotton Worm WiU Curtail Crop in Alabama and Mississippi. Montgomery, Ala., Aug. 23. Dr. W. E. Hinds, State Entomologist, to night predicted that the caterpillar or cotton worm will curtail the cot- ion crop in this State from 30 to 50 per cent, and that within the next few weeks other States would feel the full force of this pest FAM3 VICTIM TO THIEVES. S. W. Bends, of Coal City. Ala., has a. Justifiable grievance. Two thieves stole hig health for twelve years. They were a liver and kidney trouble. Then Dr. King's New Life Pilh throttled them. He's well now. Unrivaled for Constipation, Malaria. Headache, Dyspepsia. Twenty-five cents at all drugsts. ATTENTION Boys Girb You can get a FOUN TAIN PEN, guarantee for one year, absolattif free by sending ui t9 new yearly iubscrUen to The Caucasian. Or, you may send us to& new subscribers tor & months each, or tl& new subscribers tot three months each. Tt Caucasian has bee a en larged to eight p9 and Is the best ee-J paper published at State Capital. The pri is only $1.00 a year. G your father or brotStf to subscribe, and get one more nberif . .. m ...in nea ana tne itm- P - your.. Why pay lar for a foc-tala when you can get t one free? 11 U J! get subscriptions to T Caucasian. Try It 7 Show a copy f paper to your frie Send the subscript
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 31, 1911, edition 1
2
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