Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Jan. 17, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE TWO SLX,I tte(S)Si ste t flp) bn MARGARET Y\>fC J W/DDeMER RFaP TIT JSt FIRST: , Leila Madison, an orphan, has Lear. 1. la halt the elopement c ■ nr. I reckless you tip sister. Hat. idt'n Addison llunlinpdoii, a roman i!e radical. Jerry Redmond, a news paper reporter, ha* been aidtiin Leila uccouse of his ; riendsh p ot Adclp* brothel who no \ terry s coll ear tpomviatc. They arc all at Leila's fa’csrcheslei home n:here Addie and Jam meet Aunt l linn,/ and hei it e i o It 0 a r, ,Mrs. Johnstnn-llreives. iliCliiC) Oi Orton, whom l.dlQ ’X feci* to marry. Aunt Minnie 'ells A.day auoul the Improvements and ilLli the old resilient s ot Fern wood ilailOi are Iryinp to keep their hath iv.o orach rwclusirv property. this thanks Audit's socialist h ph Ilosoph)/ On an oitilnn irith lei in. I.eila finds .herSCI! in a nen world. He embraces hit Odl a.s hr h'nls hr i oond ha hr /llruptllt brinos them both hart, to ■ cat th. Adda decides to slap an at fern wood Manor to dnbl Mrs Jail nston-Recipes ami her croup on the bath in a beach issue. lie on /■.ounces In has hnuphl proper! ti with Set's bonds. Aunt Minna s savin as and h.onep borrowed iro,n Jerry to pain enouflh new properly owners to StlM.fl Hie batbinil beach <lection fd the “less pen iter,ed . Leila is preatlp disturbed because l hrii Uionet l is pane. then Orton phones Orton and I.eila turn upc to talk, aid Adci.u s new venture. Mean while Addy persuades Het lo do seme housework so, a rbanpe. r.vort go ox wirn till-: sionrj i CHAPTER 2S i "YOU WORLD not like to my ( Icvf tot you lesson!" Vuut Minnie quoted. and nils off again. "And , Bessie went off 1 1 Ke- a lambi” Then ( «m« sobered. "Frankly. I uin getting , Amazingly attached to Addison." six* , oaui "He's like a son lo me. I.eila. ! . have they told you their plans about fretting married?” j, I.eila slipped the eW-trie iron into Its soc ket, arid went to set up the , i ironing board, to aive herself time, to < answer. Now, or never, was the ' . time to tell \nnt Minnie that Addi- < aon had a moral objection to ordi- ! ' nary wedlock. and Bet didn't ,- are. ; < fcbe pretended not tit hear, in older | . to think. Suppose she told. If Aunt i Winnie was shocked ami furious. Bet would merely follow her love bare- i tool through the world, with dra- j mate appreciation of the deed. If ' , Aunt Minnie -ami you never could tell about Aunt Minnie took the ground titat he might lie immored , out of it, Addison would be kept in the house just the same. . . . No. j Nothing to be gain' d, worse luck. ' Bet never tells me her plans, you 1 , know that," she said. "Well, it wouldn’t he courteous for < me to ask Addison. Not that I don't ti list file darling boy. Perhaps I vail get it out of Bet. You try first, i.eila. A fall wedding would be nice. And bridesmaids. . . . What sort of costumes do you think would he nice j for the bridesmaids?" To Leila's untrustworthy mind * suddenly appeared the cooking-and- Uicense-smelling inferior of Bel's at tic studio and the two large police-i men "Blue with brass buttons,” she; .•Itid idiotically. Aunt Minnie giggled again and went on with the dishes. I.eila con-I tinted to press her black organdy, it struck her that somebody ought ; to have telephoned in to Edna again. 1 k!he must n’t he left to bear the brunt ! of tilings if those policemen came back, detached as she was. She rnutl call up Jerry Redmond— No, c*ne couldn't call up Jerry Redmond. ! Bhe had gone too far—she had let nini think till sorts of things coster- 1 day, she had gone too idiotically rn . mantle on him there iti the bewiiched 1 STATKMKXT OK C'ONOITION Home Building and Loan Association Os Henderson, C'., as of December Hist, 1934 (Copy of sworn statement submitted to Insurance Commissioner as required by Law.) ASSETS T)ie Association Owns: M; 4 . , Cash on Hand and in Banks $ 20,294.66 Stock in Federal Home Loan Bank 2,500.08 ii Mortgage Loans / 154,205.75 Money loaned to shareholders for the purpose of enabling . them to own their homes. Each loan secured by first mortgage on loctil improved real estate. Htock Loans 14.700.13 Advances made to our shareholders against their stock. No loan exceeds 90 per cent of amount actually paid in. TReal Estate Owned 7 453 *>s Other Assets H. O. L. C., 2 3-4 percent Govt. Bonds 5.37500 imAT ' $204,528.79 LIABILITIES The Association Owes: To Shareholders Funds entrusted to our care in the form of payments on stock as follows: Installment Stock "Kivtroi on Undivided Profits „ . 20,407.40 Earnings held in trust for distribution to share-holders at maturity of stock. Other Liabilities Reserve for Contingencies 1 500 00 TOTAL , STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ’ , v i' ■ COUNTY OF VANCE, ss: Joel T. Cheatham. Secretary-Treasurer o( the above named Association personally appeared before me this day. and beins duly sworn, says the fore going report is true to the best of his knowledge and belief. JOEL T. CHEATHAM. Sworn to and subscribed before me. this 16th day of January. 1935. F. H. HAYES, Notary Public. My commission expires 6-1-35. ALFORD'S PRINT SHOP Telephone 62 DUALITY WITH SERVICE Leila thought a* the pressed. woods It wasn’t likely he had been i much more in earnest than she was. ; They had both »elt in earnest at the moment. Men were like that. He doubtless hadn't given it another thought. . . . Nevertheless—never- j theless. she had better write than telephone Write she must; some how she must get this Addison crea tine out of the house beflore Aunt Minnie discovered that he considered it criminal to lie legally married or before something worse happened. And Jerry was the only penson who could handle Addison; and Addison was the only pet son who corn id han dle Bet. This silly complication of Addison and Aunt Minnie finding in each other the mother and son they had never had was one more turn of the screw. Orton's offer to straighten it. all out came back to her. But if there was one thing, on second thought, you couldn't tell Orton either, it was tlie fact that Addison disapproved of marriage on principle. "He would simply pigeonhole the little fool as a heartless deceiver,” she thought, swirling her iron down; the breadths. “And act accordingly. Oh. dear. 1 must write to Jerry.” But she couldn’t write to Jerry til! tomorrow. Tomorrow she would have, unless Otton was (and he wasn't) a male flirt, the concrete fact of Orton's actual proposal as a bul wark. Os course, he might be going to take her out on the links, to din ner. and dancing at the. club in order to inform her that he was going to Africa or had decided to take up land instead of water polo. But it., was not likely. .She finished her organdy with a blank sort of feeling. She took it upstairs and put tissue paper in its folds and packed it with its stock ings and bag and slippers as if she was putting something—she wasn't •sure what in a coffin .. . fit ton was, of course, on the dot. Large, ruddy, squat e. he sat at the wheel of his correct car. He hailed I ho. Ik erl tilly, lie came up the walk , and carried her litile bag for her. he established her in the car and ‘drove away. It was all as inevitable is the motions of a machine . . . "You need exercise.” said Orion KSNDEKSGN, (N. C.) DAiuT THURSDAY JANUARY 17, 1935 ' when they had driven a little vptr j "The golf will be a change for you, it wit! do you good. ..You stick too ! much around the house. You ought :to walk every day. Now there's Mary Martin—the Martins got back i from Europe, did you know it? - ; Mary tells me she walks two miles a | day. no matter vthat else she lias to do. a-s long as she is in the coun i try.” "What else has she to do?" asked i I.eila a little cattily. There is always somebody who stands for everything you wanted and didn’t have. From the time tit tle Mary Martin was led, her ex pensively simple frock fashionably up to her five-year-old thighs and her expensively perfect governess conducting her. to the class in St. Andrew’s where Leila, in Aunt Min nie's idea of a modest dress for little girls, had been till then the ruling member, the infrequent flashes of Mary Martin had played that role in Leila's life. Mary could dance all night, because she could stay in bed * all day. She looked like the snob appeal advertisements of clothe* by the smart shops—indeed, she talked like them. Her hair wasn't cut, it was "styled”: bet clothes were not j put on. she was prayerfully cos ! turned in them by a personal maid i whose highest ideal she was. She j flitted, with complete certainty of her own perfection and power, from Paris to Palm Beach, from Biarritz to Park avenue, two completely trained parents and a superlatively trained maid and chauffeur in her wake. The depression had brought the Martins back to their Fern wood | estate for this summer, it seemed. ! In the present state of the franc j and the dollar, Mr. Martin for once ' had been firm about the patriotism of staying in America; so Mrs. Mar i' tin, in next year's fashions, her . “transformation" more exquisite than j any seen off a musical comedy | grandmother, rejoined ail the Ferii- I wood clubs, and discoursed of her money and grandeur in away j neither Mary nor her husband had ! ever Ipeen able to train her out of. (TO HR COXTIXrRD> ANTI-SALES TAXERS They Claim They Were < Shunned in-Making; Com , mittee Appointments •*V j. ! Jtilfty O ii«iiut r'jb Rudcum, In iHuti l. Ha.leigh, Jan. 17. —-Members of the lower house of the 1935 General As sembly who are known to be opposed to the present sales tax are inclined to see in their failure to secure choice committee assignments evidence of discrimination against them because of their tax view-s. They regard their apparent failure as tacit admission by administration forces that they will not have much to say when the re venue bill is drawn in its final farm. It has been pointed out, however, that their failure in the matter of committee assignments is not pri marily the result of the tax opinions, but rather ibecause of their failure to ride the winner in the race for the House speakership. Many sales tax opponents supported Speaker John son’s opponents. They, as a. result, could have but little justification for any hopes they might have held out for committee plums. Thus, it is said their failure to get the plump is a direct result of their opposition to Johnson, and not because of their op. position to a tax program. Others of the anti-sales tax group did vote for Johnson, but they jump ed on the bapd. wagon at the last min ute. Therefore, observers sav, the speaker could not accord them the same consideration shown those who had aligned themselves on his side at the outset of the speakership cam paign. In other words, the fact that they jumped at the last moment to his side was, it is said, evidence that they might not “stay put”' and that they might prove troublesome later on in the session. Not all the anti-sales taxers were overlooked by any meajis when com. mittee assignments were made. There are some notable exceptions, but, say those who are supposed to know, they aligned themselves with Johnson ear ly in the race, and without regard for their tax views. Z HIGHSTONIGHT jßoys’ and Girls’ Teams Will Tangle With Middleburg At High Price Basketball fans here will get their j first look at the Henderson high \ school boys and girls' basketball teams i in action this evening at 7:30 o’slock j at High Price Warehouse when they : tangle with Middleburg in a double header. This will be the first game of the season for the girls, the boys having played one. losing that to Roanoke Rapids. Prof. J. M. Pigford. of the high School faculty is coaching the girls, ! and Miss Ruth Coidle. also a member of the faculty is their business man ager. The girls have been getting in a number of drills and seem ready to take on their foes. Four regulars from last year will form the mainstay for the boys ag > gregation, while several likely re serves expect to see action. Middleburg teams always prove strong for the locals to handle, and good games are in prospect when they tie up here tonight. PANTHERS PRIMED FOR GAME TONIGHT The Henderson Institute Panthers five and Booker T. Washington school of South Boston, Va„ will clash this evening at 8 o’clock in the Institute gym instead of Saturday, as has been previously announced. Little is known of the comparative of the two teams, hut Coach Gaither expects his team to give a fine exhi bition of basketball against the in vading Virginians. In their first game of the season, they were barely nosed out in the final minutes of play by the powerful Miner College five of Washington, D. C. The Virginian t,eam was the winner of Class B College Championship honors in that state last year, and many of their champions are on the first five again this year. A good game is promised and the public is cordially invited to attend. Patrol of 125 Asked For State (Continued Trom Page One.) at least 21 years old. This provision was added, said Senator Weathers, be j cause of growing sentiment through out the State for more stringent regu lation of such drivers. Weathers’ hill would create a divi | sion of highway safety within the j Revenue Department, with the direc ; tor appointed by the commissioner of revenue. t Significant also was the clause in the bill which would forbid highway patrolmen to do anything except to patrol the patrolmen i should be relieved of all other duties, such as the collection of revenue and I checks if we are t,o have an efficient ! patrol,” said Weathers. In that re : spect he was seconded by Senator j Harris Newman, of New Hanover, and ! Senator Dalton Warren, of sparta. j The drivers' license provisions of the Weathers bill differ little from ! those embodied in bills already in i troduced by Senators Corey, of Pitt. White, of Robeson, and others. An addition to other regulatory mea i sures along that line, however, was included in a second bill, designated as a “companion bill,” and introduced by Weathers. It calls for inspection of all motor vehicles at least twice yearly. Administrative powers would be vested in the proposed division of highway safety. i ßegional Forester •-•*1 HI aSSra ■■raK ; BP JIBBBB J. C. RIRCHKK The acquisition of forest land J throughout the South will be a fea ture discussion at the annual meet ! ing of the North Carolina Forestry Association which meets in Raleigh Wednesday and Thursday, February 6 and 7. announces the secretary, R. W. Graeber, extension forester at State College. J. C. Kircher, reg ional forester of the United States Forest Service. Atlanta. Ga„ will make an address on this subject at four o’clock, Wednesday afternoon. The subject of Mr. Kircher's address will be.j, “The Federal Forest Acquisition Program in the Southern Region with special emphasis on North Carolina.” I Mri Graeber invites all owners of for est; lands to attend .this meeting. 1 S Coal and Wood j| CITY FUEL CO. Ransom Duke, Prop. —Phone 180 — Today is the Day By CLARK KINNAIRD Gepyrtaht. M®*« I°* Newspaper by CMtnl Piwm Association Thursday. Jan. 17; 197th day. 159th year of U. S. Independence. Feast day of St. Anthony of Thebes, found er of monachism. (Having given all his possessions to the poor, he sought salvation in an old ruin atop a hill in which he remained in strictest se clusion for 20 years. He was persuad ed to leave the retreat and found a monastery where many joined him in seclusion, and the idea spread over Europe and the world.) Full moon Saturday. Zodiac sign: Capricorn. HISTORY UP-TO-DATE Jan. 17. 395 A. D. Theoposius I emperor of the Roman empire, died. He is memorable because he insti tuted the punishment of non-practi tioners of Christianity and started the inquisition in which hundred of thou sands were destined to die in agony. However, first time the blood of a heretic was shed by the solemn forms of law. the church was struck with horror at the act. and the bishop who tried was excommunicated and ex iled ! Jan. 17. 1700—'Pierre le Moyne. Sieur d’lberville, 39, took possession of the Mississippi River and all its tributa ries in the name of his most Christian majesty Louis XIV. “the magnificent. He was a Canadian. Having taken possession, he erect ed Fort Biloxi, at the head of Biloxi, first post on the Mississippi- Jan. 17. 1775—(Nine women were burned as witches in Poland, at Kal isk. The old women were charged with having bewitched and made unfruit ful the lands belonging to the ruling prince. Jan. 17. 1777 Vermont was organ ized as a free and independent state. Because it was, its people were de clared traitors to the Union! Colonists in “New Hampshire grants' ’ lying between Connecticut. River and Lake Champlain, met at Westminster, declared themselves “a separate, free and independent juris diction or State, as ‘New Coneeticut". Both New York and New Hamp shire claimed the territory, and sought to arrest the founders of the new state for treason, and Gen. George Washington placed a price on the head of Ethan Allen and his "Green Mountain Boys". Jan. 17. 1860--Mrs. Eliza. Gilbert died, in Brooklyn. N. Y. aged 42. The name concealed the identity of one of the most remarkable women of all time. As Lola Montez, dancer, she had captivated a king of Bavaria, an emperor of Russia, a reigning , prince of Poland, a lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Alexandre Dumas, Franz Liszt and many another. As 30-vear old paramour of Louis of Bavaria she : ruled the country. When nobles and clergy rose against her. Louis abdi cated rather than undo her good works. She spent her last years in the Ik S., uplifting fallen women. NOTABLE NATIVITIES Benjamin Franklin, b. 1706. who , many consider the greatest American. WATCH This Paper and Windows For Opening of Frank’s Economy Auto Store Tuesday, January 22 In Former Hughes-Smaw Building Comer Garnett and Orange Sts. FREE SOUVENIRS JANUARY SUM MOM rut *EP THU Wl «AT ""I" ■" 4 5^ • 7 # SY'jfiJlS 13 14 IS U *} ®*® 27 25* st»3ol«*H He was editor statesman, philanthro pist. author, inventor, scientist, states man. libertarian, philosopher and free lover. Also .he invented the rocking-chair. David George, known as David Llovd-George, b. 1863, statesman deem ed the greatest Yelshman. He wasn’t born in Wales! Anton Chekev, b. 1860. Russian nove list and dramatist . . . Cora Wilson Stewart. b. 1875 founder of the “moonlight-school" movement . . . Glenn L. Martin, b. 1886, pioneer flier and airplane designer . . . Frank Hague, Mayor of Jersey City whose influence as a political boss has na tional ramifications. YOU’RE WRONG IF YOU BELIEVE— i That no President ever renounced I the U. S. and turned against it. John Taylor did! The 10th presi \ dent, who died 73 years ago today i took sides ■■. hh the Confederates in 1861 and wa.i elected to the Confede rate Congress from Virginia. .• Also you’re wrong if you believe: f That King George is the riches' Briton. He isn't. The richest Briton has no title. He’s ' Joseph Rank, a flour miller! Write a wiGng: Address Clark Kin | naird care this newspaper. For proof j of any sttement, send stamped envc j lope. [Easy Pleasant Way To Lose Fat How would you like to lose 15 pounds of fat in a month and at the same time increase your energy and improve your health? How would you like to lose your double chin and your too prominent abdomen and at the same time make your skin so clean and clear that it will compel admiration? j Get on the scales today and see how much you weigh then get an 85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts which will last you four weeks. Take one half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water every morning and when you have finished the contents of this first hot tie weigh yourself again. After that you’ll want to walk around and say to your friends, “A i quarter pound jar of Kruschen Salts j is worth one hundred dollars of any fat person’s money.” Leading druggists America over sell I Kruschen Salts- You can always get jit at Parker’s Drug Store. Adv. I IV AL B. WESTER, Agent ; INSURANCE. RENTALS {I • . bonds f *HONE.I)?J HtNDCftSON.N C. ! 1 N QfPCE 115 -ypUNG ST. __/^B NOTICE OF SALE. By virtue of the authority corum.- ed in that certain deed u/ ti Us , ’ m . m cut.ed hv S. J. Satterwhite and wj t . to the undersigned as trustee { p recorded in the office of the Hes ter of Deeds of Vance County Book 162 at page 266. default hm.-j, been made in the payment of tiy f | H) thereby secured, at the request of holder of the note, I shall soil public auction to the highest bkkiei for cash, at the Courthouse dooi ■, Henderson. N. C., on MONDAY. JANUARY 2lst. 103* at 12 o'clock, noon, the following ,j„ scribed real estate: Being that tract of land fonuxrlv sold to Curtis Holloway, part or the Roberts Place, situated about |_x miles North from Henderson, !vius> on the "North Side of Flat Creel? , t ,j bordering the Henderson Townsville Road, containing 31 acres mote n, less. Same being plot No. m of the Roberts Tract. See Plat Book A Page 22, i•, office of the Register of Deeds no further description. This 20th dav of December 1931 S. T. PEACE. Trustee FORECLOSURE SAI F. By virtue of the power contained in a Deed in Trust executed by Pic-u Mont Supply Company, recorded in the office of the Register of Deed ~r Vance County in Book 95, at Pag,- 114, default having been made in n 1( - payment of the debt therein secured on the request of the holder of Ur, -arne, 1 shall sell for cash, by public auction, at the Court House dom ?n Henderson, N. C„ to the highest hid der, at 12:00 o'clock noon, on the 2m;. day of January, 1935 the following described property: Begin at the north corner made by the intersection of Winder Si and Wyche St. in the City of Henderson and run along Winder St. in a Norik westerly direction 100 ft. 1o an iron pin, corner of a lot formerly belong ing to John B. Watkins; then in a north easterly direction parallel to Wyche St. 62 ft. to the cornet of Robert L. Blame’s lot. then along th<. line of Robert L. Brame parallel to Winder St. and in a south easterly di rection 100 ft. to Brame's corner on Wyche St., then along Wyche St. (i? ft. to the place of the beginning lx ing the lot purchased by the party of the third part from C. A. Lewis and Wife on September 4th. 1903 See the deed recorded in Book 35, Page 195 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County. B. H. Hicks and Belle H. Purvis, Executors of the Will of T T Hicks, Deceased Trustee. Henderson, N. C. December 27, 1934. FORECLOSURE SALE. By virtue or power contained in a Deed of Trust executed by E !! Slack and wife, recorded in Ihe of fice of the Register of Deeds of Vance County in Book 172 at pag? 180, default having been made in Un payment of the debt therein secured, on request of. the holder of the same, I shall sell by public auction, .to. the highest bidder for cash, at the Com: House Door in Henderson, at I? o'clock. Noon, on Monday, the llili day of February, 1935, the followin' described property: Begin at an iron pipe cornet of tile S. A. L. Ry. Co. property on Garneu St., thence along Garnett St. in a Northerly direction 50 ft. to an iron pin, thence at right angles to Gar nett St. in an Easterly direction 108? ft. to the right-of-way of S. A. 1,. Railway Company; thence along tin* right of way of S. A. L. Ry. Co in a. Southerly direction 50 feel to on iron pin corner of S. A. L. Ry. Co. pro]' erty, thence in a. Westerly diroe tion 110.9 ft. to the point of beginning. See Deed C. D. Smith and wife ir> D. Y. Cooper, Bk. 132.331 and pm tition deed of Cooper heirs Book 12D 151, Also deed 1). Y. Cooper. Sr., m Dixie Hay and Grain Co, Bk. 100 page 117 and deed of S. P. Cooper, Trustee, to D. Y. Cooper, Jr. Book 100 p. 417. B. H. PERRY, Trustee Henderson, N. C., January 10, 1935. | NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SAM By virtue of the power contained ! in a Deed of Trust executed bv Liz zie Grissom (widow), recorded in the office of the- Register of Deeds nf Vance County in Book 172. at page 109, default having been made in the payment of the debt therein secured at the request of the holder of the note. I shall, sell, at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at tlx Court House door in Henderson, N C., at Twelve O'Cloek, Noon, on Mon day, February 11. 1935. the* following described real estate: Tract 1: A lot or parcel of land situate just outside the Southern boundary of the City of Henderson and on a new street, which in 191 s was named, but is now known as Lehman Street, extending from Mapl Street to the Harriet Cotton Mill Boulevard; and beginning at W. M Ellis’ corner on said Street, and ex' tending back along - his line on the South side, along - the lines of Willi* 1 Woodlief and J. N. Coghill. 64 f* •' wide 179 feet to the lands of \V M Ellis. This is that tract of land sohl by J. N. Coghill and wife in John V\ Grissom and Lizzie Grissom, his win on April 5, 1918, said deed recorded in Book 78, page 523, which deed ' referred to for further reference. I" 1 W. Grissom is now deceased and Liz zie Grissom, his wife, now holds this land in fee simple. Tract 2: Adjoining the lands of W M. Ellis and Lizzie Grissom, ard bounded as follows: Beginning at it" corner of Lizzie Grissom’s line on tin South side of a street now call'd Lehman Street, extending from Map' l Street to the Harriet Cotton Mil Boulevard; and running thence aim - said street 22 ft. to : the center of ditch; then along the center of said ditch and parallel to Lizzie Grissom present line in a Southerly directin; 179 feet to a stake: then at tight an gles to the street 22 feet to Gris-nm rent corner: then with Grissom’s h 177* feet to the place of beginning 8" 1 deed W. M. Ellis and wife to John ’)'■ Grissom and Lizzie Grissom, his wife recorded in Book 93, page 8. Regb ter of Deeds office in Vance Count' John W. Grissom is dead and I-izzi" Grissom now holds in fee simple This the 10th day of January, T'? T. P. GHOLSON, Trustee.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 17, 1935, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75