Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / March 2, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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Vil li YOUH I.AliKI r tl,nl subscribers 'J,, ,ul(.w at least .las- before their ;'(M.,.,)tinH rtpire. ESTABLISHED SEPTEMBER ( i h ... Wiiooto which ; . I;iv- heell Used by . . . . mono M 1"..(lMi years i h Jin- still fiilt ivatrd in , tli'- world, form part , ., I ' liit'it f cult ivuted let 1 1 '( et'tly been added , , , , 1 1 ii . collections' of Field 'al in al History here. :iit iv;'lcd wheats from .I i - of tin1 world complete Mi ,1 of the wheats have . , I through the co-opora- ,.fi'i,'o of Cereal Invostiga ,, !! Uepartmeut of Agrk'lil I!: . department is constantly , , . in growing new and old (.f wheat in order to deter- :: . , .-uita'-ility under various , ,: i-i tlie United States'. V, : ! was fiit introduced into this ' m I. "'( by the Spaniards and (.,.! .u, New England and Virginia , t '..'. 'aiiy settlers,' according to Pi:' p. C. Davis, ot the museum Kurvpe and Asia it has been Kr.,vsi mucc prehistoric times, Mr. vtates. The beginning of its .a-ii'ii belongs to an early period i: ri'i ii:story of the human race. Miiii.ind has probably always used in- s tiI;' of the wild grasses for food. Si me ! tliesu furnich very fair-sized :'r:t:!,N ami from such our cultivated J..: are unquestionably derived, ;i!,.i;-i: botanists cannot now always tr,,,' :iiu)i to their wild prototypes. An evoiq.Io of such is the wild Km--nr. f Palestine, a large grained wild h: h has been claimed by i" be he ancestor of our i ; t i ; 1 1 1 ! v. heats of today. (Yt, mi primitive wheats are still :"i v:i it, places in southern Europe. ; .!!' the' Kinkorn, Emmcr and ' .e'h of which probably repre- a j'tii'ip of wheats of separate :! 'Ill" Kit'korn still grows wild ... .' i t i-i and elsewhere in the South !' i: i;-,;,e. Spelt is the oldest of the :-.--1 wheats. H was probably : v.: ! of ancient (J recce, lloiw- I' V. 1 1 1 1 h, be llif'se simple forms seen 'su' li unusual Wheat, which in spite not come front Po l!ie m()iiiil.ainous re Alasl a Wheat, which nowti as th" Mita''f ,.i:, i, r'.ei 1 ', in- . ' ' ;', 1 1 hearb'd whv.it f ;, ;,i,d ('!!!. Wb'al. "ro'.vn in ' n: o'if lo.el.y Mountains. 'I :- I i;:i um Wheat from Russia, i fii-i.i. b ; f u f for macaroni , . 'e !"!,.; inni h like long 'bristle . The mall bristly Turkey I, a !.!(' one of our leading i '. i',1'1' wheals of the United. Ville'!. lina, a tie-rfb J'bn-i-" m'1 v!i"at majy be Keen together ii the chief American types. Th" i pr'u.g wheats of the north " ;;reat plains region of the "i ! State; and Canada are repre 'il ly Marquis-, Red Fife, and ' If in t varieties. Particularly ro '! .- I .! i-, a huge-eared wheat eal- Kil Mr i"i i ;.!. low, i" i-i' i''i. grown under irrigation 1 1 i'.iniog th' wheats at the i i may be i,een some of the it 'i ; of bai ley. Ordinarily the I'li.t.ly of the grains among ; a perfectly bald variety, i-' grown for hay and may sur- a fodder, long after cultiva f the others becomes obsolete th- cessation of malt-making, e: has also been added an in- !.g case of wild grasses', rang- Hill lil.'ii, III' I'll' v:!,,, ti'.r v. it! 't'H ft.,!,, Alaska arid Canadian fodder J-'tf .'., lo the Silver Pampas Grass 'f -.th America and Natal Grass 'Ii- South African grass now helps impoit a roseate hue to the plains r,r ;at:dy peninsula of Florida." lIMSTKItS SCARCE IN CHURCH OF ENGLAiNI) I.mi i ,e l.'.l Thf. Tlishon of '"''j. on suvs the Church at, Englant :n.'t. I'md ministers enough to fil inlpits. The number of men ;" ! ,, ,l!y ordained since the war has ' ;i '-tie-third of those annually or- 'UaiKd br.-Arf the war. 'b-'au.c- of the poverty to which '' " my of the clergy have been '"''-i d by the war, many parents :'V" u-ased to regard the church as m-i iuing desirable careers for their Tiiere are 4,000 fewer clergy v. .j Lint; in the parishes of England !,,:'" 1!14. ii(4T GRil 1WL1 HIT msm CARRIES OFF ' " 3ii SHOW HONQHS ICK01RY 11, 1915 on: wiioumi oaskei. iviu quint wloth last night won from Mercer University in Atlant:.-, will piav Va.'hi!'gtoP and l.ee at Ualcigh lo iiighi in the Tar Heels' last; game of the .season. MiVth Carolina met cvey comer r.i Allan! won tiii pi aise ot the gnat erowo's. and was described liom the st ait as a "smoolhrurming t i.'uhim.'. It was hardly expected tiiat the Carolina ouint would win loth the southern and se'uth Atlantic c!Kvaip;onsh;p, but the Tar Hceis' have done both. The Associated Press i-tory ef the game last night fal lows: Atlanta, March - North Carolina University won the college basket ball championship of the south here last night by defeving Mercer 'uni versity, 10 to 2U in the final round ot the K22 tt'arnment. Georgia Tech bested Alabama university. Mil to 25, in the match to decide third (dace as these teams were beaten last night, in the scmi-f in-.ils. Tl.e match, which attracted a ca pacity house to the huge auditorium was hard fought throughout as the Maeon five matched its speed and "gretisiveness against the machine like precision of the Tar Heel quin tet.' Mercer's band came up to, cheer the team and its hursts o'f music during the intermission and before the game was matched by the blare of Georgia Tech's band. The North Carolinians g'ot the jump to stnrt the game when Mc Donald lancl'ed a field goal from al most the center of the flo'or and the Tar Heel's having taken a lead held it throughout, gradually piling up the score. The first half ended 21 to 10 in their favor. Almost perfect passing and guard ing was shown by the North Caro lina team and the Mercer five was unable to break up their plays suc cessfully enough It" overcome them although they were fighting as lr;rd at the finish as when the game be gan. C. CarmHiaob of North Carolina led the scoiing, ringing up f"'v,- ft'-''0' goals and shooting eight foul goah ;n 14 attempts. Mcl )on-v!d, lVery and 15. Cnrmichael contributed three field gc.'als a piece. Harmon, Mcr- i i i I - j ccrs running guaro, leu ins warn with five field goals and six foul goals out of a do.en tries. lope made three fie!..' gotv's ami Oamoie two. -- - NATIONAL REGULATION NEC I'iSSAKY S pi i 1 1 gfi eld Hep u b 1 ica n. Tiie supreme court's lr.ci:;i"n es tablishbig the power of the' Intra state rates had been toreshadowe' i,.v earlier decisions and was gener ally expected. Indeed, legislatio? M i.'vMi'.' Ibis power has been undo. t.-..keo by advocates of a policy which would pJsice the ttate above nationa.' irilerer.li; it the regulation of rate" aiifl imposes inequitable and per bap:; impossible btlrdcns on the ear ners. If we, as a nation, tire to havo a workable ra'dwav policy- nothing more- essential than ,l.hat the methods of rtiguhttion shall sale- euanl the well-being ot the nation . . . ... i . . . . i . . i " . n whole and ot i.ne .1 ransjK.r uinoo system. If the stales were t.o reian: their pf.'wer over intrastate raleh. the transportation act ot J'J'JU voutu collapse. ft is t.o be hoped lliai tiie vvcoicio lerieullural ' interests, instead of ,.M--:is;t no'- in then attempt, to have i" " ... ..... i . i nower that property ''-'" to C(n"-res:-: delegated to ir.e svaie:. vill co-operate in the lormuiauon oi nlan of bringing trie "Slave coo.- missions and the federal commiss-o-i iidr practical cooperation. iy oom., this, they will he serving them selves best in the long run arm tun ing the good will of persons every where who1 believe that national ouestions should be settled on ' na tional lines. A numocv or bus sec tions have been maue, mw -widely urged being the creat'.on of egional commissions, compweu oi representatives of the sty.xes ai- fected- which Would consiuer . tirnlnr section but would be subordinate to the cf-ntP Commerce commission Inter- All regulation of rates anu s. rvi a- .....licVwmbl be subiect to the ;uris diction of a national holy, but . the machinery should do , uui... minute to insure ' consideration i-f locrv! needs. .. . t.fofo The limits witnin wm..i regulation is effective are such that only through some antiquated statute or unfairness on the part of a commission is it possible to secure nv benefit for a particular . inorus trv or community. Commerce ignores .Z unAwrio and it is incon- sistent with sdund 1 business that the rate on a snipmeoi, ..,..w. should be controlled by a state body l.u!i. n cMnment iroing outside tne state, but for perh-ps one-quarter distance,' should be subjet : to the federal government. By estao W I .nttSrity. the in ersta t, .nmmission nas to pas.- on such purely local subjects-as commerce is involved. In fact, the examiners of the ; -commission give shippers cr consigners as prompt. f"ir and efficient service as can oe obtained from the state commis sion. . JaJJsMt V mm-w M - HICKORY, N. CM THURDAY EVENING, MARCH 2, p!-''!;;:'' Fire on tKe Roof of "Uncle -Sam's Treasury iPlillJ J There was great excitement in Washington a few dars ago when fire broke Treasury. A gas torch had exploded HEAVY COATING 0YSLEET" L ' -' ' "" "-" " " ' ! A M n M M. -M. l ant! Han M m f Telephone and Electric Lines Shot to Pieces and Current Off Here Part of Forenoon Trees and Poles Fall to Ground Record Ma chines Tied Up Telephone, telegraph and electric wires in this section of the state were shot to nieces last night and this morning by a visitation of sleet the heaviest, many persons say, that has visited this part of the country in many years. Fruit and shade trees and Trees in the" forest crash ed under the heavy load of ice, and in many places the roads leading to Hickory were blocked by fallen telc-j phone poles and trees. In some parts of Hickory the el ectric current was off early this morning, and at 10 o'clock the cur rent went off in the Record office, the trouble being reported at the First Paptist church corner. The plants operating with electric power were closed down throupghout this section while repairs were made. It was 12:15 o'clock thi.s afternoon be fore the service was restored. Early this morning inquiry at the telephone exchange brought .the cheerful news that the long distance wires east and south were intact, but they went wrong later in the 'l,o re noon and telephone communication with Ihi: outside was ternriiiatcd. The Western Union, which depends on the Morse code rather than the human voi-e, was in better shape and at 11:30 its wires were reported in fairly good order. Although thj- weather turned warm', the ice clung to trees and wires most of the day, part of the time a warm rain also falling. It was the worst sleet storm in many winters and publication of a newsr paper without telegraphic news or electric current to heat the metal and turn the wheels was a hard task. EARLIER STORY OF SLEET Mid-winter . weather, worse than any the ground hog could contem plate, attended the inauguration of, March and gave a brilliance to trees and crass that only nature can afford. The niemdnts were not varied, silver or diamond, as you please, and they weighted the limbs of shade trees and monarchs of the forest alike. There were crashes during the night and on some streets -were broken limbs this morning. It was about the worst old-fashioned- sleet in vears. ' Young gardens which had begun to reach the bragging stage were flattened by the coating of ice and the early vegetable growers probao lv will have to take a new start The weather was not so cold this movniner. Professor Barb set his trans at 6 o'clock yesterday when the mercury reached 28 degrees, but the works froze uo during the night and had to be thraweel out before the dope could be furnished to a waiting and independent world. There was some wire trouble re ported, but it was expected that tel ephone service would be good most of the day. The lines between Hickory and Morganton were down, the local office reported. From Hickory to Statesville, Salisbury and Raleigh which is the route of the Record's leased Associated Press . j. i it. wire me lines were nuaci aim Daily and ignited a ban-el otar. By good work, the blaze was, confined to the roof. was thought there would be no trouble in getting the news. The freeze and ice were expected to benefit plowed ground and to make crops grow better in the spring and summer. Also the heavy rain was doing its bit in filling up the big reservoirs of the hydro-electric plants. Yesterday and today might have been likened by merchants to "idle" days, but they have their uses. They don't help the advertising game much - . a , . I " 11 ... either, out tnis is an in cue couiw of natural events and nobody should worry. The murcury registered 27. de grees last night, but at 0 o clock this morning the temperature was 45 degrees. Yesterday the minimum temperature was 2'J. The forecast is fair weather tomorrow, and colder. TALK H 10 Ir. E. M. Craig discussed the Hiek- i i i i i '. ory lownsnip nign hcoooi fin-i-wi-tion before the Hickory Rotary Club at its weekly luncheon at Hotel Hut- fry this afternoon and the matter will go before the board of directors, under the charter ot the cluo, ana report back to the membership for action. Thos. P. Pruitt aiso spoke on the matter. O. Joe Howard discussed thritt, emphasizing the importance of ta"k- irnr care of the pennies, laying up something against old age and mak ing the cornnnuiity richer and bet ter. The program was in charge of Joe D. Elliott and Kenneth C. enzies. Boys work will be put on m May. The district meeting at Winston.' Salem the 21st of this month also was discussed. . DOUGHTON RETAINS SEAT Washington, March 2i Rep resentative Doughton, Democrat, is entitled to his seat in the house as member of the eighth North Carolina district, election committee investigating1 the contest filed by Dr. J. I. Camp bell; Republican, reported today. WORKS TO SUCCEED HAYS By the Associated Press. IVashington, March 4. Dr. Hub ert) Work, .first assistant postmaster general, will succeed Will H. Hays as head of the postofnee department, it is learned definitely at the white house today. - - - - FIFTY DOLLARS CASH Washington, March 2 Unani mous agreement to eliminate the cash features of the soldiers bclius, except in case of men whose ad justed service Py would not ex ceed fifty dollaif? was reached by the special Republican members of the house ways and Means Commit tee. COTTON Open Close March 18.30 18.37 May 17.95 18.10 17.13 17.35 July - October 16.45 16.69 December 16.3S- '16.50 Hickory cotton 17 l-2c. I SCHOOL LOCI WHS 1922 out on the roof of the United States By the Associated Press. , Lawrence, Kas., March 2. Ruth Muskrat, a Cherokee Indian girl from Oklahoma who is a student at the University of Kansas here, will visit China this spring as' a delegate to the World's Student Christian Federa tion Conference at Peking, April 4. The hope of the conference, Miss Musk-at. explained recently is to get students of various parts of the world in vital touch with each other and, among other things, solve the prob lems confronting Chinese students who have become imbued with Oc cidental ideas. Miss Muskrat, who is 17, has done Y. W. C. A. work in New Mexico and worked among her people in religious and educational work. "The primary need of my people," Miss' Muskrat declared, "is trained native leadership Indians, them selves, who understand the " peculiari ties of the tribe and can work with them. "Indian women arc more capable in most respects than the men. They know better how to barter they arc shrewder. Thi.s is an outgrowth of he time when women raised the r : 1 crops. The men go in more jor socuu activities. If I have aparty, 1 can always count on the men attending. But if I want to put on a financial drive. 1 appeal to the women. Fifty seven nations will be repre sented at the student conference in Peking, and will lepresent more than 200,000 students throughout the world, she said. After, the confer ence, delegates- will visit the principal universities of Japan and China. Miss Muskrat, who says her father is Cherokee and her mother Irish, will be the second Indian ever elected a delegate to an international student conference. She goes- as a guest of the national board of the Young Wo men's Christian Association. BIBLE SOCIETY TO CONTINUE ACTIVITY New York, March 2. Expanding its recent announcement concerning its manufacturing policy, the Am erican Bible Society has issued a statement asserting that it would continue as a publishing house, is suing the Scriptures in more than 150 languages and dialelcts, but would have its work done through various printing concerns instead of in its own plant. "The Society will continue- ' to control its own plates so as to pre serve the accuracy of its versions for which it lias received wide rec - ognition and1 acknowledgement read, the statement. "This change of policy in its printing program has .been, distated by the fact, that the Society is. con vinced that it can do its printing more economically elsewhere than it -can by conducting its own printing establishment. There will be an actual increase in the society's output and this change of policy marks a distinct advance and is in no sense a retrenchment in its program of scripture publication." Fish has always been a principal export of Norway. , mfflGIHIIOI! i ivir. o rosieu oionmgcr, one oi the county's most prominent and :1 i. ... i :. . i :i . i - i j i. - "Tl t T 11 ill -!' t uusianuai citizens, dieu mis morn ng at 3 o'clock at his home near lie fair groundsii death coming al most instantly. Mr. Cloninger had -ecn in good health and was feel ing splendidly until late yesterday ifternoon when he complained oi; not j ieeling well. He was age.d 75 years j ind 0 months. He was a prosper 1 jus farmer and a 'fine man, a good 4 christian and he will be greatly missed by a wide circle of friends. He was a devoted father and ! leaves to mourn his loss rive sons ' a id three daughters. Mrs. Clon inger preceded him to the errave unany years ago. Funeral arra'nge- tvja ILJK, w .Ulctut UOLll WU1U is received from two sons, who are living in Kansas. The surviving children are Messrs. Phillip, O. C. Cloninger of Hickory, Lonnie of Johnson City, Tenn., and Phillip and Hugh of Wichita, Kan., Mrs. James Hart of Windy City, Mrs. E. E. Smith of Hickory and Mrs. R. L. Bpwman who lived at home with her father. Mr. Cloninger was a Confederate soldier and the following account written by Mr. Cloninger himself, was taken f;rom the Catawba Sol dier: I enlisted in May, 18G4. Was sent to Camp Vance for drill, and there was formed into the 3rd Bat allion, of 16 year old boys. From there, I with a few others, was transferred to Company E. 32 N. C. Regiment, in October, '64. We found it at Winchester. The day tfter, I was introduced to the min nie balls 'mly first experience. Af ter thai, day 1 was in all the prin cipal battles the 32nd regiment en gaged in, the fiercest of which were Cedar Run and . Fisher's Hill. We were then sent to Petersburg and hedc my experience was still further perfected. . I was captured at Appomattox Bridge eaiptured because the bridge was on fire pre venting our crossing over The number of captured were about 350Qi. We were hastened to Newport Nevs, where we had the toughest time of all. We were not released until July 3rd, 1865. On my re turn, 1 found destitution at home, but I was sufficiently injured to it, and I discarded the veranin Jacket, put on the best I could find and we"n t to work to sust ain life. I was successful on my farm and in the manufacturing on my farm and now am in very easy circumstances. I have my farm and mill leased, and make my home in Hickory, where 1 own real . estate. The family I raised are a joy and honor to me. My two sons in Oklahoma are doing well. I hereby greet the comrades not only of my own regiment, but of the state and south as well. DENY SUPERSTITIONS BUT ADMIT IDEAS Tokio, Jan. 18. Under the caption ''The Oriental: I lis superstitions." Marion E. Hall writing for Japan Mission News says: " 'Yamada san,' I said to my teacher, 'you Japanese are a very superstitious people, are you not?' To which he replied that the lower class were certainly gullible enough; he himself decidedly was not. As a test I asked him if having gone to a funeral of a member of his family he would take the same road home he had takeri to the cemetery. He laughed and. said while he was free from these ancient ideas' he would probably return by another road. Popular belief has it that if you em ployed the same road going and coming, the evil spirits now acquaint ed with the route would be inclined to lead another relative to the grave yard. "We are not superstitious no, indeed; these ideas will simply persist, is the better way to state it' he said. "We have an old gardner who comes in once in a while to trim our trees, fix the hedges and to do sim ilar work. Asked to do a little grafting on a persimmon tree he called in a young man for the work. I found out later than in Japan the grafters are all young men we speak here of horticulture, not poli tics as they impart their life and vigor to the grafted parts. And I thought that Burbank would have been without honor in this land. "While June, the month of roses, is the popular time for marriages in America, in Japan the most unpopu lar is that of September, the month of the monkey. The Japanese word for monkey is 'saru,' and 'saru 1 means to leave It married in this month the tendency would be for the bride to leave soon; thus the month is strictly avoided." m me i m HERE'S A REAL CHANCE The skill and ingenuity of Record readers will be tested in the word contest put on by the Southern Pub lic Utilities Company, and many people will enter for prizes. There are several good ones, the largest be ing S20. How many names of dishes can you form out of the words Southern Public Utilities Company?! Can you write a good essay on the advantages of cooking on an electric range? The opportunity is here, WEATHER f Rain this afternoon and probably toiyght., Older. Friday gener ally fair;. 5PRICE FIVE CENTS B!E UP, HIST! FICIENT :s: E Cambridge, Mass. March 2 The discovery of the remains of an an cient people who once inhabited the American Southwest and were inter mediate in development between the Basket-makers, the earliest race known to have lived in this region. and the Uuebl.o Cliff-dwellers, whose remarkable stone villages along the Arizona cliffs have attracted wide public interest, has been one of the results of explorations made during the past year in the Marsh Pass vc-gic'n- of northeastern Arizona by the Peabody Museum of Harvard Univer- ty. The "Post Basket-mskcrs" is the name given the newly discovered people. The Harvard expeditions to this semi-desert region, over 100 miies from the nc?rest railroad- were begun in 1914 by A. V. Kidder and Samuel J. Guernsey of 'the Peabody Museum staff and were later continued under the sole direction of Mr. Guernsey. Prior to 1914 commercial . collectors had found traces of the Basket-mak ers, but facts about these earliest people of the region had never been secured by trained archaeologists un til the Harvard expeditions began. These expeditions have not only con tributed a mass of information con cerning the Bssket-makers tut nc.v show the existence of a people who who have followed the Basket-makers in point of time but preceded the Cliff dwellers. The "Post Basket-makers" resem bled the Basket-makers in many par ticulars but were clearly in a later stage of development. The Basket makers had no permanent dwellings, whereas these later people had stone houses in caves and in the open. They also had pottery, crude in some re spects but with the beginnings of decoration and some of it was fired. This is the earliest pottery fcnown :o have been made in the Southwest. Instead' of burying their dead in caves, as did the Basket-makers, they seem to have lived in the caves and to have conducted their burials in the open. Their more settled life is attri buted to their success in agriculture They grew corn of a primitive varie ty. ', - - j Skeletons found in the course of the excavations show that both the Basket-makers and these- successor. had rather long skulls, wercas the Cliff-dwellers - who followed them were round-headed race and always had the skull avtifically flattened oy the hard broad head-rests of the cra dles in which the babies wtre placed. The relationship of these various peo nies is still a matter of doubt. ; It is believed that the Post Baskc makers discovered during the Har vard explorations were descendants of the Basket-makers tut whether thev in turn were ancestors of th-Cliff-dwellers is not certain. It seems doubtful on account of the marked difference in the shape of the head even aside from artificial flatten.! The Basket-makers had dogs lhe mummied remains of two were found during the Harvard explorations arte 're now on exhibition at the Peabody Museum- along- with a nuantitj ; ot other objects Hlrative of Basket , . i:- r ,,-..i a long-naireu maser me. . ..1n ,.nl- animal about the size of a small col lie the other a smr-Her b ack and white doR, and a long full-hairetf tail These were clcary genuine dog, and no? bred from coyotes or other wild animals of the region. Many of the objects found in tne drv caves of this region are in an ex (liy ,. rf nreservation or. traordmary state ct pi Pi?matc account of the dryness of the climac, despite their great age- MORAL INCOMPETENCE Springfield Republican. If the requirement of a two-vcar college course were to be condition of admission to the bar a the national conference of bar a sedations strongly recommends, th chief, weakness of the sion would not be reached For th. . weakness is moral more than i inte 1; lectual. Mr. Root, Mx. Taf an , others are doubtless well within th. facts in saying that the profession has far too many ill-trained, incom petent practitioners, yet the public whom they practice on would be bet ter off if they were intellectual b, incompetent instead of morally in competent. Better an honest man who is both unlearned and clums? than a dishonest one who -is- botl learned and clever. The legal profession is not the only one to be criticized because of i certain moral degeneracy among o. large number of its members, Let no one misunderstand us on that; point. 'Lawyers morality is fully as high as business morality. Every profession or calling has its quasi crim inol fringe. All are vulnerable, The moral problems involved are pe- rnliar to paeh occupation. It-mi be admiitted, however, that the ; law often attracts men of defective moral sense if they have certfein showy gifts which may be utilized profi tably in bamboozling, bullying f.nd blackmailing. Mere legal learning and trained skill will not raise the moral con-' tent of the legal profession. If the advocates of more advanced require ments lor admission to tne bar teera to ignore this fact, it may be !?- cause they recognize the hopeless- Iness of giving a man chaiacter by 'grounding him in nothing bujt boob;,' i
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
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March 2, 1922, edition 1
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