Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Oct. 19, 1911, edition 1 / Page 6
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tTr!ay u I State Netfs. j Bernard Norden? an employe in the Belma cotton oil mill, wu caught by the set screw of a shafting a few days ago. and hi right leg torn off below the knee. J. P. Meares. a carpenter helper In the Seaboard Air Line round-bouse at Spencer, swung on the atepi of an engine a few daya ago and waa crush ed against a post and killed. Mrs. Bruce Craven, of North Wllkesboro. accidentally shot herself rery seriously last Wednesday by a pistol which waa under the pillow, and fell to the floor while she waa making up the bed. Theodore Holton. a young son of District Attorney Holton, of Winston Salem, lost three fingers In an ex plosion of a dynamite cap, with which he u playing, on the morn lng of October 12. W. A. Carver, an employe of the Durham Hosiery Mills, committed suicide last Saturday by shooting himself through the head. It Is said that he was a victim of pellagra and was Insane as a result of the disease. Frazier Jenkins waa killed and Ir ving Chandler seriously wounded by the breaking of the guide wire sup porting a large bucket, which was carried on a cable across the river at Weaver Dam, near Marshall, Octo ber 16. The owners of the Surry Chair Factory at Elkin have decided to move the plant to Hickory and en large It. The new concern will be known as the Hickory Chair Manu facturing Company and will be capi talized at $100,000. Baxton R. Sowers, one of the most popular engineers on the Asheville division of the Southern Railway, was struck on the head by an unknown man on the night of October 10th, in Spencer, while crossing the railroad yards, and very seriously injured. Pitt County's new court-house and jail which was destroyed by fire in February of last year, have been com pleted and were turned over to the county commissioners October 12th. These buildings were modern in con struction and equipped with every convenience. A reward Is ofTered of $1,000 for the burglar who entered the resi dence of W .W. Horn, at Monroe, Sunday morning of last week and shot the ydung lady who gave the alarm. The Governor offers $400, the town and county $400, and friends $200. Dr. Russel, of Fletcher, was fined $500 in police court at Asheville on ctober 14th for violating the law reg ulating the giving of prescriptions. The case grew out of a prosecution of C. C. Seawell, a druggist, for sell ing whiskey to a man named Wilson without prescription. A young 'man named Green, an employe of the Yadkin River Power Company, In crossing the Randolph and Cumberland Railroad track with a mule and wagon on the morning of October 17th, was struck by a train and knocked unconscious, while the mule was instantly killed. The Statesville Lumber Company, whose .plant was burned a few weeks ago, will soon be ready for business again. Their new plant located near the North State Veneer Company, is nearing completion. The capital stock is to. be increased and it will do business on a larger scale in the future. v The revenue officers continue their activity in the vicinity of Hickory. Two cases having been disposed of before United States Commissioner Whitner this week. George Harri son, of Hickory, was tried, but re leased for lack of evidence, and Zeb Stamey was held in bond for $500 for his appearance at Federal Court. FAKE "BEGGARS" ARRESTED. "Crippled" Beggars Found to Be Abie-Bodied Men and Sentenced to Serve on Durham's Roads. Durham, N. C, Oct. 16. In the Recorder's Court this morning fou tramps on their way to Raleigh were tried on a charge of vagrancy and sent to the Toads. The fellows spent Saturday on the streets of Durham, sat squat on the sidewalks, quoted Scripture support ing their profession and cried when men passed them by. They sold shoe-strings and chewing gum lead pencils and bought near-beer with the proceeds. They wept for alms and receiving them said in the hear ing of an officer: "Ain't Durham a dam easy old town," and . drank more. They owned jointly a pair of crutches and two walking sticks, a tin cup and perhaps fifteen cents worth of lead pencils besides their faces, which were their real fortunes. The bibulous beggars were all men of perfectly sound body. They Id not He long,, but admitted that they weref ;. members f an organization that does town at carnivals and State Fairs. ' - - ' A IIKKMIT IIOIMED TO DKATIL Cot Wm Hitting Upon the Body Eat ing the Charred Flrh Whra Body Woo IHacovered Decmed 114 Led HI range Life. A special from Concord to Satur day's Charlotte Observer tay "With bis body lying across the hearthstone of his cabin and his clothing burned to shreds from a lamp that rested against his leg. the remains of Jean Napoleon Ingram, globe-trotter, lecturer, writer, re cluse and most unique character this section ever knew, were found at bis hermitage in No. 1 Township yester day about noon by a small colored boy who lived on his place. "Coroner Isenhour went to the borne yesterday afternoon, together with an undertaker and a number of neighbors. The sight that greeted their entrance was a ghastly one. On the hearth lay his decomposed body, burned beyond recognition by a lamp that Is supposed to have fall en from a box near-by and on his breast sat a large cat that had eaten the fleah from his face until only the bare bones of his skeleton were left. A few steps away was a gallon Jug containing three quarts of whiskey. The coroner's Jury rendered the following verdict: 'That the de ceased came to his death by acciden tal burning.' So far as is known, he has no living relatives." BIG FIRE AT SPENCER, Southern Railway Suffers $15,000 Ix.h One Person Perhaps Fatally Burned. Spencer, Oct. 14. Fire which or iginated from the bursting of an oil feed pipe to-day almost destroyed the large blacksmith shop of the South ern Railway Company in Spencer, and seriously, if not fatally, burned Earl Goodman, a young white man employed in the shop. The pipe bursted without warning and Goodman was enveloped in flames of burning oil. He rushed to a barrel of water and jumped in with the hope of saving himself. Later he was carried to he Whitehead-Stokes Sanatorium, in Salisbury for treat ment. Owing to the burning oil the fire spread rapidly, and although the Spencer fire department and the Southern Railway shop fire depart ment responded promptly, the fire men were unable to cope with, the flames. After the water from the Spencer mains had been brought into service the fire was quickly subdued. The firemen rendered valuable ser vice in saving other buildings of the Southern Railway Company valued at hundreds of thousands of dollars. Falling timbers in the burning build ing handicapped the firemen in their work to a considerable extent. The streams played upon the fire until subdued. Eye witnesses state the blaze traveled through the ruild Ing faster than a man can walk. The loss is estimated at about $15,000. MURDER IN IREDELL COUNTY. Juno Summers Killed by Walter Rus sell Over Card Game. Statesville, Oct. 11. In the north ern section of Iredell County last evening June Summers, a young man about 18 years old, was struck in the head with a piece of scantling by Walter Russell, aged 23, and so bad ly injured that he died this morning about 8 o'clock. Russell fled when his victim fell and has so far eluded officers and citizens ever since the tragedy. The troubles which ended in death occurred at a sawmill, and is said to have been the result of a quarrel about a card game. Russell resent ed a remark by Summers and seizing a small piece of timber struck Sum mers such a terrific blow on the head that his kull was crushed. Russell fled into the woods at once and while some of the men about the mill ad ministered to his victim others pur sued him and still others notified the officers. Russell Is said to be a bad character. Summers was the son of Gus Summer, an Olin Township THIEF ENTERS A LEXINGTON HOME. Frightened Boy Away and Stole Con siderable Sum of Money. Lexington, N. C, Oct. 16. To night at about 8 o'clock an unknown man entered the home of P. D. Finch, a prominent farmer living on the outskirts of Lexington, and stole a considerable sum of money. There was no one In the house at the time except Mr. Finch's eight-year-old son, who was so badly scared that he could give no description of the bur glar. The man carried a big club in his hand and with it threatened the boy. In his search for money he laid the stick down and left It The boy could not even tell whether the man was black or white, though he may be able to give a better descrip tion when he gets over his scare. Tho Democratic False Cry of Over production. Lincoln Times. The estimate of the crop for this year is about the same crop of 1907 (the year of the Roosevelt panic). Yet cotton sold that year at fourteen cents. And, too, there are more peo ple now to be clothed. The Demo crats 'will come poor speer using their old argument of "over-production." I General NetPs. L, P. Mulllnax, manager of the Troy oil mill waa shot and perhaps fatally wounded at Troy, S. C, Octo ber 10th, by G. W. Long, a druggist, of that town. T. J. Hill and J. II. Revels, farm ers living near Adelle, Ga-. engaged in a quarrel the iro ruing of October 17th, and Hill shot Revels. A son of Revels then shot Hill through the head. Chairman Mack has called a meet ing of the Democratic National Com mittee at Washington, D. C, on Jan uary 8 th to fix the time and place of holding the Democratic National Con vention. Reports from the regular monthly meeting of the Anderson County Farmers Union, were to the effect that one-half of the cotton crop Is being held by the farmers for high er prices. Two negroes, A. B. Richardson and Ben Woods, were taken from the city jail in Caruthsvllle, Mo., October 10th, by a mob, and lynched. Feeling against these negroes had been at a high pitch for some time. A negro at Louisville, Ky., who at tacked two girls and their mother October 14th, was seized by a mob of angry citizens of that city and beaten so badly that it is thought he cannot recover. Bishop Van De Vyner, of the Cath olic diocese of Richmond, died Octo ber 15, of complications resulting from a cold. He was 67 years of age, and had been bishop of Rich mond 22 years. A cyclone struck Indiana October 14th, wrecking homes and destroying property to the amount of $50,000 in one village called Ben Davis, near In dianapolis. Other cities and towns were damaged also. Hoke Smith has announced that he will relinquish the Governohship of Georgia November 15th, preparatory to taking up his duties as United States Senator, to which office he was elected by the late Legislature. Governor Colquitt, of Texas, has called a conference of Governors of the Soutehrn States to meet In New Orleans on the 23 rd, to discuss ways and means to prevent a further re duction in the price of cotton. Slight earthquake shocks have been recorded on the seismograph at Layola college, New Orleans, for the past few days, and are believed to be the forerunners of a more serious quake within the next few days. The News-Leader, Richmond, Va., indicted recently, charged with hav ing mailed papers containing objec tional matter in its report of the Beattle case, entered a plea of nolo contendere and was fined the nomi nal sum of $50. Burglars dynamited the Planters Bank vault October 16th and escaped with what is believed a large sum of money. J. J. Clements, who slept in a room above the bank, was awaken ed by the explosion and exchanged shots with the robbers. The woman suffrage amendment to the constitution of California; which, was first reported to have been defeated, was adopted. The re call which includes the recall of the judiciary was also adopted along with the initiative and referendum. Postmaster-General Hitchcock has authorized the establishment of the longest railway mail route in the United States.- It will begin Novem ber 1st, and will extend over the Western Pacific lines between Salt Lake City and San Francisco, 992 miles. Two Atlanta women, Mrs. M. A. Edwards and her sister, Mrs. A. E. Dobbs, were struck by an automnhti Just as they stepped off a strset car on uctober 16th and Mrs. Edward was killed and Mrs. Dobbs waa seri ously Injured. The chauffeur was placed under arrest. Foul play is suspected in the death of Smith Walsh, the bridegroom of eleven days, who committed suicide in Chattanooga, Tenn., last week. It was first reported that he was shot, then later a letter was sent to his people that he had taken a large quantity of strychnine. John R. Walsh, ex-hanker and former head of a score of railroad enterprises, was paroled Saturday from Fort Leavenworth Federal prison after serving less -than two years of a term of five years impris onment following conviction of the charges of Infraction of national banking laws. Seven persons were, killed and twenty-two injured in a collision be tween a northbound Missouri Pacific passenger train and a fast freight train at Fort Crook, near Omaha, Neb., October 16. The accident is believed to have been due to a mis understanding of orders on the part of the freight crew, FOR FARMERS OF iLtUT TXS Soother Railway HU Operate fiperUt Agrkullttrml Train. Knoxville, Tenn.. Oct. 14. To plate the advantages of ativnU&e ag riculture before the farsstra of East Tenses, the Southern Railway Company, working in coop ration with the Slate Department of Agri culture and the University of Tea nets, will operate a special Agri cultural Train over Its lines In this section, the tour commencing at BlountTlil, October lth. and last ing until November 10th.. The train will be mad up of three lecture coaches, three exhibit coaches and one fiat car for live stock to be furnished by the Southern Railway, and one Anns Palace Stock Car, to be arranged for by the Tennessee De partment of Agriculture. State Ag ricultural Commissioner T. F. Peck, Df. C. M. Morgan. Dairy Agent of the Southern Railway, and well known experts connected with the State and University will accompany the train and will conduct lectures and demonstrations in each df the thirty-three points, which will be covered In twenty-three working daya. The lecturers will attempt to ac quaint the farmers with the latest scientific investigations relating to the soil, the plants and the farm ani mals, and to advise them how to in crease crop yields and at the same time by a rational system of crop ro tation to leave the soil richer year after year when crops are removed.! The subjects of education and health will also be treated. The Southern Railway is bearing the whole ex pense of the campaign in pursuance ""o ui mo taupdigu in pursuance of its policy to materially assist in' nitrogen, 450 pounds of phosphate, the development of the territory itjand 990 Punds of potash. All of I thla nlant tnnA oama nn rf (Via .nil serves. CMPIAINT AGAINST pOAST LINE. Fayetteville Company Alleges Dis criminations in Freight Rates on Lard. Washington, D. C, Oct. 16. The Armfield Company of Fayetteville to- oay filed a complaint with the Inter- state Commerce Commission against the Atlantic Coast Line Railway, al- leging that the railroad comuany is discriminating against Fayetteville in! uu BuipuieuiB of lard from Savannah, Ga., to the North Carolina town. It is contended by the Fayetteville firm that a rate of 33 cents per hun dred is charged on lard from Savan- nah to Fayetteville. A distance of luuco, wmie me same commoa - ity is shipped to Rockett, Va., a dis- wue " mues' Ior twenly cents Der hundred nonndH , 7 The Armfield Company contends that this rate is unreasonable and unjust and asks the commission . for TfilfAf - - - . Banker Walsh is Pardoned. Leavenworth, Kan., Oct. 14. An order from Washington, paroling John R. Walsh, the former Chicaeo uau yjcsiucui, was received at thA FVd . r.KVu uvjo this morning. The prisoner at once began preparations' for the start! home I itr. ttt i i x , , . . mi. vvttisu up 10 me time or nis;pounas or phosphate, and 28 pounds parole, had served one year, eight j of potash, all of which will be given months and 26 days of his five years sentence. When .the - prisoner was notified that a parole finally had been granted he was oyerwhelmed. He had been - anxiously awaiting the arrival of a iavoraDie repiy. However, when it failed to come yesterday at noon, hours after he had expected, he pass - ively gave up hope. FORBIDDEN FROM COERCING. Southern WhnlMulA nrArom IocaJ v - V t 4 .CKITVt- Jitinn ITfeola T?fTn G)in. tl-Trust Law. nr . L i. .uuuifiuiuwjr. Aim., UCU XI.-in a "consent decree" handed down by me circuit uourt ror the Northern Ttmtt i i. . .. Aiauama io-aay, tne Southern Wholesale Grocers' Asso- .. .. .- ciauon, prosecuted under the Sher- man law, is forbidden from coercing manufacturers to sell only to asso- elation members or those whom it scribed against conspiracy to main- win or 10 coerce- manuracturers to fix limited selling prices. The injunction case against the Southern Wholesale Grocers' Associ- atlon was Instituted by the United Of.t.n t. , uui ciuiucui in Diriuiuguam, June, 1910, for the purpose of re straining the association from" .cer tain practices alleged to be in viola tion of the Sherman anti-trust law. BIBLE IX PHONETIC SPELLING. Judson Jones Spenda Seventeen Yemn in Producing Volume. - . iuauaaiu, wuin., ucw id. juason' Jones, the author of "The AlnhabAt of Orthoepy and Its Application to iuuuuBjuaua isiium uriugmg out a complete translation of the Bible! M, n),nnoH, ir. t - - i uua uw iwuw jj s igui. all. dVUco system of phonetic spelling has been recommended by Prof. Lounsberry, of the English literature department of Yale, and Dr. W. T. Harris, form erly United States commissioner of education. Mr. Jones is 80 years old, and be gan the work twenty years ago. At required fifteen years to write the book, and another two years to cor rect the proofs. Farm Topics GREEN ttAXraiSGXo. II. Ctaro- Wto would Ulak of nils com as a green manuring crop? Bit why not cse it as well aa ry? True, the chemical analysis of green corn re veals lees plant food ta tt per ton than green rye but what aboat the tons per acre? Whtre yoa can get eight tone of green rye yoa should be able to get twenty-four tons of green corn- You can, on aTerag land, by use of. aay. 200 pounds of some cheap fertllUer. grow from IS to 20 tons orf gretn com per acre which should he cut up with a disk harrow and plowed under Just before hotting for tassel. The following ta ble shows the average chemical an alysis of a large number of samples of green com compared with the composition of stable manure: ComjoalUoa of Green Corn Compered With the Composition of Freeh Cow Manure. MtteriU Kttnsia Pb P-I'ii Green com 8.2 S.O 6.6 Fresh cow manure.. 7.6 1.6 7.3 Fresh horse manure. S.7 3.0 6.6 The above table shows green com to contain 8.2 pounds of nitrogen. 3 ponuds of phosphate, and 6.6 pounds of potash per ton. As indicated above, land in a fair state of cultiva tion should grow at least 15 tons of green corn per acre At tnU rate a ieij-ttt,it? ueiu wuuiu gruw mv iuui of organic matter which, when incor porated with the soil, would add. in an available form, 1,230 pounds of this plant food came out of the soil of the ten-acre field to be sure, but. though it was in the soil, it was not in an available condition for the succeeding crop until It was taken up, digested, and built Into the tis sues of the green corn plant, from which it will be readily liberated by decay after being plowed own. The amount of nitrogen thus ren H0raH 0n0,u .m Is equal to that supplied by 160 tons of resn horse manure. or 30 tons of an 822 fertilizer. The phosphate 8uppiied by this amount of green ma- nure ia eaual to that fonn(, in o i o tons of an 8 2 2 fertilizer or in 280 tons of fresh horse manure. The potash rendered available is equal to that supplied by twenty-five tons of an 8 2 2 fertilizer or 135 tons of j fresh manure. : At 50 cents a ton it will cost $80 to haul and spread 160 tons of ma- , nure. The seed corn should not cost I . . over jz.vu ana, witn tne right kind of implements, the seeding should be mi.- .-... , a siuaii ciyeuBB. iu aiSKing and plowine necessarv to !nrnmrat I . . " - i . n nrt a 1 i 1. A. - f i 6u tui ii wim me sou propeny, incidentally prepares the land for the succeeding crop so that the labor ex pense is but a small Item. But what about old dry corn . . stalks? Shall they be burned? I - VU.J KTU UU1UCU1 j thirty bushel crop of corn will leave i mil uusuei crop oi com win leave w. vuw aictago auuui VJLUS lOu OI stalks, fodder, and "shucks" on the land. This ton of this dry stuff con- tatna 9n o ,,a- n. - A I . . up to succeeding crops Just as soon as this material can rot in the ground. Why not use these old stalks as a source of organic matter for soil improvement? It - n ,... bwiu uiai the best thing possible to do with the corn crop is to husk it in the field, leaving both husks and fnddoi. k , stalks, then cut the stalks to pieces with a good" sharp stalk cutter and piow tnem under to decay. This method of handling them is far su perior to any other I know, as they make a poor quality of forage and a V A 4) 1 right good an1l"ir rt In the above we have emphasized the plant food Aimanfa nn.t..j . . vwummcu 111 ; vesetable matter, but the most T ,,L "v'tlwua uumus is xnat Of liberatlner nthorwi. i . ,UCi t mai. :0od8 In the soil lt8elf opening up its rOTril To mrt A .i . " "UW"S uie ram waters . go down deP into the subsoil wnere tte7 are stored and held for crops. Lands that were plowed deep and filled w.tt. n.r..i. not 8uffer from drouth during the past season. J. L. BURGESS, N. C. Dept. of Agriculture. : MECirMramrrera t?imn,Tn : . :'uaw XXUJUL9. j - Very-JJttle Cotton Being Offered on tne unarlotte Harket. Instead of the 552 bales of cotton wmcn were delivered at platform on October of last year, but UatSS OI tfift WhftM itanU ' VS'VVt Qpon the Charlotta I C8terday Also to Pce of 1 1-!..1?:.65 cents Per pound which it "rougm upon IU appearance twelve months naet k i uicagcr once or 8,75 was the best that it could com- "ua yesterday. Yesterday honr Saturdar. .Ii - - ' . r a voasiaerame T. ,7 w nmber of bales which were brought Into the city, as opposed to the remaining days of III ?f l,We,ek 11 18 estimated that Ztll I Plat'rm Is losing in the neighborhood of the excessively low price which cotton now commands. wnT?K number f oalea per diem 7rtt are 8.0red at the Charlotte no. vWarehouse rains at very near the same .figure which repre sents the daily gales 0n the local g " 111 l -,n N . . - bar farts?. thai he ta u w,t tea natil it Snr i. . ' traMy afecv tt ,v fUaa. ta v-ry 4JIV UlWf of iha ton prodect, etten u fi 4 by lb actual ce. s, , H for tli pro Cf ,Utl t Randal ttUU tt mzu V J ? ilh cottes ta t l It has Wa ta a!f; lx ti hardly a&a th! . . l ytt Un raach4 ia It u-if Thra art &anv diet thai the toasir. canl cottoa Ufor iu 1 hecomea nonnai ... H var. Spek ta Cvitrmi U (Washington Senator U FbUaiia, os' M progressive HtpatUcjia 7 ttrday decided to start . month on a ipchn;!:. thorugh the mlddu m Tl will last until Coacrt ta , camber. It will atr lu f kout. Minnesota. Io. RAtk4. braska. Missouri. OkUbo-, x sippl. and probably oi0 itZ erary haa not bn arratf.j Senator La Follette 1J &a or ten feature pcbet 5j lta ous brief ons. He tn4 tf 1 t vUlt Ohio on this trip t during the Christmas holllsn fk coast was not included !a tu because of lack of tlm. Alfalfa Growing. An experiment that Mr. Shemwell has tri-d out profit is that of groln a'.!: j. Shemwell has one-third cf u In alfalfa this summer. a&4 ; r of the drouth, he hag cut crops off of it and pa:ure4 u in to the ground once. He u , pleased with the rciaHa obwui that he will try two acre ia iitss i and he contemplates greatly ttlx-p mg mis acreage u u tho cp Many farmers have the idea tUt falfa will not grow in this mcl but Mr. Shemwell's exprieac ?ui seem to indicate that it m. Lru ington Dispatch. Schooner From Alaska With Shtj. Five Starving 1 igtrr. Seattle, Wash., Oct. 14. TWit er schooner Bender Brotben, frcs Nome and the Kuskewiil RJrer, pit Some ana lDe Jvuskcwui mrtr, pit ed In to at CaPe nitfr' 4 abled, with more than slxty-firt peo ple on board starving. Her catoHit "v"11" nSln exploded nine dsyi ago. Us the schooner wa ifio ca!l of ti 1 cape. Captain Louis Kmttkt U - , f rlously ill. Saved Ills Mother's life. "Four doctors had elreo at ss," writes Mrs. Laura Gaines, of Atoo, T -1 .LIU. . - A ! v A I T .a "onH mw rhlMmn mnA lil ET i MV Ui J cumui - friends were looking for tot to . j irienas were looKing ior iae w nuCU WJ CUU lUBIBiCU luai i wot " trie Bitters. I did so. sod they done me a world of good. I ni & .v. tt riHo nmtrt Electric BStun I . is a Drlceless blessine to vczti troubled with fainting nd iicy spells, backache, headache, vkta debility, constipation or kldcty Alt orders. Use them and gain health, strength and vigor. TbejTt guaranteed to satisfy or moztj re funded. , Only 50c . at sll droqifj. No folk southern Rail 02J ROUTE OP THK "NIGHT KXPRrA" Travel via Raleigh ( t'nloo 1 and Norfolk Southern 1UH to and From All Point is Eastern North Cro Una. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT SEPT N. B.The following f6ed8jJ' urea published as InformsUos evh and are not guaranteed Trains Leave Raleta : p. m. Daily "Sl&t preas." Pullman Sleepiof Norfolk. trnjet 6:15 a. m. Daily for Washington and Norfolk, Parlor Car service between K and Norfolk. mix 6:15 a. m. Dally, except S for New Bern rU Cbocowloitf lor Car service. 2:40 p. m. Daily, except SJ for Washington. Train Arrive RIHeh 7:20 a. m. DaiJy.; ,:2 daily except Sunday and daI1- A Trains Iave CM? p. 10:15 p. m. Dallf N,'B press" Pullman Sleeping Norfolk via New Bern- faft 7:15 a. m.-Daily for and Norfolk- Psflor Car Washington and Norfolk- 3:20 d. m. Dilly for Oriental and Beaufort, IV Service. vation of Pullman Sleep" space, apply to ce, apply to aU D. V. CONN. Oeneral a r Raleigh. N.C.-rrt w w 9 w Rnfm.l Sunt.. . Oen. 1 Norfolk, Virginia. A
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 19, 1911, edition 1
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