Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / Oct. 7, 1919, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, 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
A THE CLEAN-UP. AND PApT-UP CMAjQN IN OXFORD IS NOW ON GET BUSY! in AND COUNTY OFFER BRILLIANT OPPORTUNITIES ALL HOME PRINT. VOLUME XXXIV. OXFORD, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1919 NUMBER 80 01 UDTT TTTDTT TTH i I --.. i i i i - i i i JO.."- LALJ VTJD T tci ttV, . ' ' v -..-- ' v -. - - . ' . u anionic tsti Ml- WEEKLY TOWN riUWIIUM LIST FOR THE CHRYSANTHEMUM SHOW The Two Days Event, Thursday and Friday, October 30 and 31st. Generosity of business men unpre cedented. Over one hundred dol lars in cash to be given away as premiums, besides many useful arti cles. The Chrysanthemum Show for Oc tober 30th and 31st, bids fair to be the most successful in the history, of the Woman's Club. The managers wish publicly to thank the business men of Oxford, for their unprece dented generosity. Over $100.00 in cash has been donated and many valuable, useful articles of merchan dise. Chrysanthemums. Premiums will be awarded as fol lows: Cash Best 6 white chrysanthemums $6.00 Second best 6 white 4.00 6.00 4.00 6.00 4.00 Best 6 yellow Second best 6 white Best 6 pink Second best 6 pink Best 6 salmon 4.00 Second best 6 salmon 3.00 3.00 Best 3 white incurved Best 3 white inflex 3.00 Best 3 yellow incurved 3.00 Best yellow reflex ........ 3.00 Best 3 cream 3.00 Besst 3 bronze 2.50 Best 3 salmon Best 3 red Best single white incurved 2.50 2.50 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 Best single white reflex Best single yellow incurved Best single yellow reflex . . Best single pink incurved . Best single pink reflex . . Best single salmon incurved Best single salmon reflex . Best single cream incurved Best single cream reflex 1.00 Best single bronze incurved . . 1.00 Best single bronze reflex ....-1.00 Best single red incurved 1.00 Best single red reflex ....... 1.00 Best basket single variety ... 2.50 Best basket pompom 2.50 Best pot grown 3.00 Second best pot-grown 2.00 Eest exhibit chrysanthemums. 10.00 Second best white 8.00 Totted Plants. Best Begonia One year's subscrip tion to Public Ledger. Best Sultana Portable Lamp. Best Geranium $2.50 in trade at Oxford Jewelry Company. Best potted plant of any variety Water set. Best red Dahlias Bottle Hudnut's toilet water. Best vase pink $1.00 in trade at Council's. Best vase white Glass towel rack. Best vase yellow Box of candy from Candy Kitchen. Other Cut Flowers. Best roses, any arrangement 3 lbs. Whitman's candy. Eest Zinnias, any arrangement Bottle of Olives. (Continued On Page Four) ORATOR AT THE GRANV7LLE BOUNTY FAIR Hon. Cameron iorrison, one of the best speakers in the State, will speak at the Gran ville County Fair at 1 o'clock next Tuesday, October 14. TOBACCO SALES BRING AVERAGE OF OVER $51 The Oxford Marketls Juggling With the Stars. The Oxford tobacco market is on a regular boom this week. The floor averages for the entire break at the five warehouses here last week was $51.75 per hundred. This is the biggest average ever made oh any tobacco market in the world. All grades show sharp advances this week from $10 to $15 over last week's prices. The sales are followed closely by a full corps of buyers and the bid ding is spirited and at times excit ing. There seems to be no limit to the prices and the market is a' truly runaway affair. The farmers are rushing the weed in as fast as they can get it strip ped and are highly pleased and jubilant over the big checks they are receiving. Some of them show nervousness, fearing the boom will recede before they can sell out. Large crowds of both town and country people are following the sales and seeing the new records in prices now being made. . The quality of the offering is fairly good, but the best, grades are being held by the farmers. There are several thousand pounds of "dol lar tobacco" in Granville, it is said. WOMEN PLAN CAMP TO BE LOCATED NEAR ASHEVILLE War Department Will Furnish Site and Provide Officers for Drill Washington, Oct. 6. On a high mountain top, overlooking Asheville, C, the United States training corps for the promotion of the health of women is planning to open a big camp next spring to which women of all Southern states would be permit ted entrance. This camp is planned as one of the five, scattered through out the country the others to be lo cated in the East, the Middle West and the far West. v Appearing before the House Mili tary committee yesterday Miss Sus anna Cocroft, of Chicago, president of the corps urged - the enactment Jf legislation authorizing the War Department to ' lend the corps land sites and camp equipment. ENON COMMUNITY HONOR THE RETURNED SOLDIERS Impressive Church Service and Din ner Served to Five Hundred People. Enon community uever does things by halves. Last Saturday was set apart as the day on which to honor the seventeen brave boys who march ed off to war. Church Service. The church was well filled by the noon hour, when fourteen of the seventeen soldier boys marched in to the church and took their seat in the second pew from the front. Rev. G. T. Tunstall, pastor of the church being one of the soldier boys, Dr. J. D. Harte, pastor of the Oxford Bap tist church, was master of the cere monies. Dr. Marsh led in prayer, in which he thanked God for the safe return of the soldier boys; he pray ed that they will be as faithful to God as they were to their country, and he petitioned the Almighty to prolong the life of President Wilson, who is now on a bed of sickness. Then followed a song service, in which Mrs. Harte, the beloved wife of Dr. J. D. Harte, sang a delightful and inspiring solo with much pathos. In the choir were Mrs. T. G. Currin and other splendid ladies of the church. Mrs. Charlie Knott presid ed at the organ with much grace and skill. In opening the meeting and desir ing to impress a point, Dr. Harte re ferred to the late John T. Pullen, of Raleigh, who was a most devoted follower of the Master. The people had much faith in Mr. Puilen's pray ers, said Dr. Harte, and one day an aged lady who was in deep sorrow called on Mr. Pullen and requested him to pray for her. "No, I have quit praying," said Mr. Pullen, "it takes all of my time to thank God for what He has already done." That, of course, was the most fer vent prayer that Mr. Pullen could have uttered. Two Good Speeches Rev. R. C. Craven, pastor of the Oxford Methodist church, delivered a splendid address, in which he spoke of the sacrifices the boys made when they marched off to war. He referred to the present critical per iod of the world and enjoined the soldier boys to keep, their shoulders to the wheel and endeavor to estab lish peace and plenty. He said that the soldiers had seen much; that their visions were broadened and that he hoped they would become leaders of men. Mr. Craven also spoke of the needs of a hospital in Oxford. Mr. B. W. Parham was the last speaker on the program. He con gratulated the soldiers on their a chievements and spoke at length on the period of reconstruction. Mr. Parham made a fine address and held the crowd, but the elements were against him. While he was speaking the wind changed and filled the church with the aroma of bar becue, Brunswick stew and Java coffee which were being cooked in the grove back of the church. When Mr. Parham, who is the food admin istrator of Granville county, got a whiff of the good things out in the grove he - lifted whatever barrier there might be and told his hearers that there is,no limit, "to go to it" and enjoy themselves. The Church Roster. On the wall in rear of the pulpit, engraved in Old English- on heavy, linen cardboard, hangs the names of the seventeen young men of the church who were engaged in the world war. All of the names were called and all answered save two or three who were absent and account ed for. The list follows: PASTOR GEO. T. TUNSTALL, LELAND S. AVERETT, CHARLES S. CURRIN, SIDNEY T. CURRIN, SAMUEL W. DANIEL, ROBERT GARLAND DANIEL, EARLY FRAZIER, THOMAS G. HOBGOOD, E. B. HOBGOOD, SAMUEL HOBGOOD, CHARLES E. JONES, SAMUEL L. KNOTT, JOSEPH RAGLAND, J. THORNTON YANCEY, HILROY BULLOCK, EDWARD BURNETT, JESSE CLEMENT. The Dinner. There were five hundred people on the ground and all of them had ?heir appetites with them The five rnt;" J L ur- and the five fishes loaves ui uiw- , - .r,. ,! that appeased the hunger of the mul would not have been a smell for the people present on this occasion It required ten full grown shoats, a twenty-five gallon pot of Brunswick slew great staks of bread, pies Wed' chicken, pickles, cakes, fruit and coffee to feed the throng. It was an elegant. dinner, prepared with erUt care. Mr. Fred Currin with fi, fsistance of Messrs. Taylor bgood and Richard Goo, pre pared the barbecue and Brunswick stew It was pronounced "elegant hv all and the fried chicken, pies, coffee and other nice things ootid nofbe surpassed. There was an abundance and to spare. Dr. Har?e asked the blessing and extend ed an invitation to every one . to par ficinate Although everybody .was ver hungry, there was no crowding. 7one live --Enon, the perfection anSirltion of coHiinunity life! -Mr I. E. Harris, one r of the leading lights of Creedmoor, spent a ?ew hours in Oxford Monday, THE CLEAN-UP CAMPAIGN NOW IN FULL BLAST.' The first gun of the clean-up and paint-up campaign was fired by Gen. B. S. Royster, who made a strong five minute speech from the stage: at the Orpheum Theatre.; last Saturday night. The broom ori jade entered upon the job in the business section Monday morning and -the ?ood work will continue throughout Oxford ;for the next five weeks, i The following is a . list Of the OOrnrnifvpos fnr rhx wards outside of the business jiis-j met: ; .4 - Cotton Mill District R. H. Lewis, chairman; Mrs. J; F. Ferguson, J. W. Thompson, Mrs. Ji R. Card, Mrs. C. J. 'Wilson. '' ; West Oxford ' BV Lanier, chairman; Mrs. C.v H. Humphries, Mrs. W. H. Loner, '. Miss Irene Nichelson. ; North Oxford East of College, v Mrs. H. M. Shaw, chairman; Ci D. Ray, W. A. McFarland, Mrs. D. G. Erummitt, Mrs. Harry Williams. North Oxford West of College. ' Mrs. A. A. Hicks, chairman; Irvin Mang-um, Roy Currin, Mrs. John Bul lock, Mrs. D. W. Hart, Mrs. W; N. Thomas, Mrs. T. L. Cannady, Mrs. Ar thur Glasgow. - -South Oxford Bast of Main and Han cock Streets. Mrs. Frank Blalock, chairman; F. W. Hancock, Jr., Mrs. Ira Howard, Mrs. PnalL Veasey, Mrs. Walter Crews, Mclver. S. H. Pritchard, Mrs. Alfred Sails, Mrs. J.C. -Robards. ; South Oxford West of 3Iain and Han cock Streets. Mrs. John Webb, chairman, Miss Belle Cooper, Mrs. W. D. Bryan, Mrs. C. A. Upchurch, Mrs. J. B. Powell, Mrs. G. A. Coggshall. Carts. B. K. Lassiter, chairman; B. W. Par ham, A. W. Graham, J. R. Wood, Ernest Bragg, J. B. oPwell. Furnace. W. T. Yancey, chairman. Photography Mrs. Mary C. Evans. Sanitary Inspector. Dr. J. A. Morris, chairman Publicity. Mrs. N. H. Cannady, chairman. ; Aovvisory Committee T. G. Stem, mayor; Mrs. R. G. Lassi ter. chairman; Civics Deoartinent Woman's Club; Mrs. R. H. Lewis,! Mrs. N. H. Cannady. Boy Scouts. t Mr. Butts, director. - ROXBORO IS LITERALLY ; ON A BUILDING BOOM I More Building Going On at Present Than Ever Before In History of ' the TownNew $200,000 Court House. Oxford people who have recently visited Roxboro says that the ,town is on a building boom. First of .all a handsome Methodist church is ber ing built at a cost of $60,000. When completed this will be one of the Drettiest structures to be seen, and will do credit to any city. The cot ton mills are adding $500,000 im provements in dwellings, water sys tems, and to the mill buildings. This will mean much to the com munity. Then vast improvements are being made on the streets. The upper section of Soudi Main street is being laid in asphalt, which will be extended to the other streets as well. T .W. Pass and Son, are preparing to erect a large building on .Main street,, while Sergeant and Clayton and Long Bradsher company have greatly improved the appearance of their building by the addition of a handsome front, with a large store room added to the rear. Several contracts have been open ed for the erection of quite a num ber of residences which puts Rox boro to the front in building. The Baptists have just completed a $50, 000 parsonage that was begun in the early spring. New enterprises are opening every day, the Broom works noticeably among them. As another mark of the progres siveness of the town is the building of a new court house. The new building will be erected upon the site of the old one, and will be a handsome structure when completed. It will cost in the neigh borhood of $200,000 and will be of brick and granite, having four stor ies with jail on the top floor. LAND VALUES ON THE INCREASE IN GRANVILLE Recent land sales in Granville county show that the era of low nriori soil has nassed. Real estate values have passed beyond the wild est dreams of land owners. Farms in Granville are now worth $200 per acre. Some say farmers can not till sucn land at a profit. Those who have bought it, however, say differently. One farmer who resides in town says he has made some $300 acres more than pay for themselves in the last ,rr raore TTlB fn SP TT1 S.V be CXCCD" lVYU J tAA kJ. - tional by reason of the fact that' he is an intensive farmer. His land is seldom idle. He proves, however, that prices are not unduly inflated that real estate hereabouts is worth all that is being paid for it to the man who will work it for all that it will return. He proves, too, that some golden oppor tunities have been lost in the past. Lands that will yield so large a pro fit could have been making dollars in former years when they made on ly pennies. ., With farm lands selling as it now does the farmer is foolish to be sat isfied with the returns he has been accustomed to getting. - Such land should be under cultivation all the time. V -: .y i- : Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lv Myers and son, John Albert, and Dr. and Mrs. John Bullock and son left last Sat urday for " a week's vacation trip h the valley of Virgin The trip is being made in Mr. Myers new Studebaker qarj RUNSER. Aviator Runser will fly here from Lenior where he give exhibi tions during the week proceeding our Pair, corning cross country with his mechanician and making but one stop for gas and oil. Daily exhibitions of his skill in handling the big army type plane will be the feature free attrac tion of the Granville County Fair on October 14, 15 and 18. These exhibition flights being given eich day at about two o'clock. During the off hours passengers will be carried for short ten to fifteen minute trips over the grounds and their environs including a view of Oxford from an . altitude to be chosen by the passenger himself. A WORD OF CHEER TO THOSE WHO WILL FLY OVER OXFORD King Albert of the Belgians flew over New York' last Saturday morn ing in a navy hydro-airplane piloted by Lieut. Commander Thomas B. Hasner. When the King alighted he said enthusiastically: 1 "It was a grand spectacle." This ought to be a stimulant to those who corntemplate a flight over Oxford next week at the Granville County Fair with Lt. H. J. Runser. BLOODHOUNDS ARE WORTH THEIR WEIGHT IN GOLD Some 'Talk of Getting a Couple For Oxford. On top of the news that a negro by the name of Taylor stole a check for more than $300 at the Johnson yvarehcmse last week, and who was run down" by bloodhounds and is now in the county jail, it is interest ing to note that the same blood hounds' were taken to Kinstonvjthe following day and caught a man who had stolen tobacco from a ware house valued at $228. Bloodhounds are a terror to theives. There is some talk of tak ing up a subscription here to buy a couple of good blood hounds. If the thievery keeps up in Granville the dogs will be purchased at once, it is said. ; - HAULING CHILDREN TO SCHOOL The Truck Is a Popular Feature In Some Counties. The Charlotte Observer compli ments County Superintendent Mat thews in his efforts to bring the best school facilities and advantages to many hundreds of children in Meck lenburg who would otherwise be de nied them, through the , use of trucks in hauling the. children to and from school. The tendency toward con solidation of rural schools in order to provide better graded and better equipped schools has been given new empetus in Mecklenburg and other counties by the scarcity of teachers. Properly graded and housed, larger numbers i of children in larger schools with fewer eachers can be given better advantages than can be given in smaller schools poorly grad ed and with one teacher or two teachers to the school, as the case may be. RED CROSS ROLL CALL. Mrs. A. L. Glasgow Has Been Ap pointed Chairman of the Gran ville County Chapter. - . (Special to Public Ledger.) Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 6. Mrs. A. L. Glasgow, well known woman of Ox ford, "N. C. has been appointed chairman of the Granville chapter for the third Red Cross Roll Call, November 2-11 it was announced today at southern division headquar ters of the American Red Cross. The third Red Cross Roll Call will be a nation-wide drive, participated in by the men and women of Ameri ca without regard to differences of class or creed, for the sum of $15, 000,000 and for : 20,000,000 mem bers. The southern division's quota for the five states of Georgia, Ten nessee, Florida, North Carolina and South Carolina is $750,000 and for 2,000,000 members. While it is the confident belief of Red Cross leaders that the ' nation will respond readily, to the plea for $15,000,000, they are even more confident that every- man, woman and child to whom the appeal is made will not fail to -give the dollar that makes him a member of the greatest humanitarian organization the world has. ever known. THE KING'S DAUGHTERS WILL ENDOW COT IN HOSPITAL At a recent' meeting of the King's Daughters it was decided' to buy some stock in the hew Oxford hospi tal. It was also agreed to begin work to raise funds to endow a cot in the hospital, - . LTV i OXFORD TOBACCO MARKET 1 ECLDPSES FORMER RECORD J Farmers From Twelve Counties r Bring Their Tobacco To Oxford j On Wagons. I The Oxford tobacco market, con tinues, to grow and' extend its terri tory. It is now drawing the golden weed from several counties, some tobacco- coming here from a distance of a hundred miles or more. The prices have been high from the op ening day of the ssles and are con tinuing to ascend skyward. Farmers were here last week from twelve counties. Caswell was well represented for the first time in several years, and Halifax county, Virginia, has sold considerable to bacco here this season. Mecklenburg county, Virginia, farmers are here in larger numbers than ever before. More tobacco from Person, Durham, Wake and Franklin counties is com ing to the Oxford market than ever before. Mr. H. C. Rayman, former Granville county man who moved to Brunswick county, Va., several years ago, was on the market last week with a load of good tobac co. He traveled over 100 miles and camped by the road side two nights coming and going. , Counting the tobacco that is ship ped to Oxford to be sold on the warehouse floors eighteen counties were represented here last week. UNCLE SAM NEARLY READY TO BEGIN COUNTING NOSES Several Thousands of Appointments Are To Be Made. On October 18 and on November 15 the civil service' commission will hold examinations in many cities throughout the country for clerk, male and female, in the bureau of the census,' Washington, D. C, from which several thousand appoint ments are to be made. The entrance salaries range from $900 to $1,200 a year,"nd promo tion through the various grades may be made as high as $1,380. In addi tion to these salaries, appointees whose ability and' qualifications jus tify such action will be allowed the bonus of $20 a month granted by Congress, beginning with the second month of service. In other words, a clerk who enters at $900 a year, or $75 a month, and whose services prove satisfactory, will receive $95 a month, beginning with the second month of service. The bonus of $20 a month is allowed to those who merit it in addition to any salaries quoted in this , announcement. The examination are for positions in Washington only. The enumera tion will begin Oh January 2, 1920. THE LARGEST BOY IN STATE LIVES IN ASHE Sixteen Years Old And Wreighs 328 Pounds. According to the Wilkes Journal, Ira Phillips, who resides near Othel lo. Ashe county, on the waters of South Beaver creek, is the heaviest chap in the State. Ira, who was 16 years old last May, and who at his present age weighs 328 pounds. Ira, at the age of six years, tipped the scales at 106 pounds, at the age of 10 he weighed 250 pounds. He is five feet, nine inches tall. He enjoys unusually good health, sleeping from seven to ten hours each night and eats three hearty meals each day. When the trip was begun his brother teasingly told him that had he remained at home he could have brought at least ten more bushels of apples to mar ket. Ira'o weight and the good health he enjoys is the best illustra tion of Ashe county's plenty we have seen in many a day. THE HOSPITAL. The Stock Is Being Sold Rapidly. Dr. N. C. Daniel, chairman of the hospital steering com mittee, reports that five hun dred shares were taken up to Saturday night last. "We are certainly going to land the hos pital," remarked Dr. Daniel with a smile as he rubbed the palm of his hands. v DISCOVERS DEADLY POISON COTTON GREATEST ENEMY United States Department of Agri culture Has Solution With Wonderful Results. (Washington Special.) A deadly poison to the boll weevil, the insect which has cost southern planters $100,000,000 annually, has been discovered in the form of dry powdered calcium arsenate by the bureau of entomology of the depart ment of agriculture. Although cal cium arsenate has been used at the government experiment stations since 1914 as an insectitude, the de partment of agriculture has started only recently the campaign for wide application of the poison. Already cotton planters are showing keen in terest in the- experiment and many planters over the entire belt -have created their fields. The average knocker has a lit tle head and a big mouth, and is a good deal like the boat which used to ply the waters of the Ohio. It had a big whistle and - a little pro peller and every time the whistle was blown the propeller would stop because there wasn't steam enough for both at the same time DISTINGUISHED EDUCATOR COMING HERE THURSDAY Supt. Fred Archer of the Greens boro City Schools To Be In Oxford This Week. The first regular . meeting of the association recently formed for the advancement of the interests of the schols will" be held at the graded school auditorium on Thursday night of this week. At this meeting various plans for community uplift and school improvement will be dis cussed. Supt. Fred. Archer of Greensboro, is to be present and give to the Ox ford people some .of his experiences along, the line upon which they are just entering. Mr. Archer is one'of the youngest school men of the State and one iof the livest as well. For many years he was at Selma where he did a great work. A short time ago he went to Greensboro to take charge of the schools there and hasbeen doing great thinga there. He plans to build up one of the, best school systems in the South in' that town and will do so through the hearty cooperation of his peaple. That is just what is needed in Ox ford. -.' Every citizen of Oxford is asked to be present at this meeting as the association is in no way confined to those people who have children in school. It is a community organi zation and one in which every one will soon be interested. Men and women mustr band themselves into such an organization that will make Oxford the most desirable place on the map. The public cannot say that every thing has been done for the advance ment of the schools until every plan has been tried. G. B. PHILLIPS. CABARRUS COUNTY WINS STATE BOARD OF HEALTH'S PRIZE Granville Coanty Made a Arery Poor Showing. Cabarrus county wins the State Board of Health's prize for the larg est percentage of population of those taking the anti-typhoid vaccine dur ing the campaign the past summer. The number vaccinated in that coun ty was 5,774, or 20rl per cent of the entire population of the county. The next largest ' percentage was Iredell county, 18.02.. The number vacci nated in Iredell was larger than in Cabarrus, but the population of the county is larger, so Cabarrus kept the lead in percentage. Cabarrus will draw from the State Board of leading the other counties $721.75. The State Board offered to do the vaccination free for the county that had the largest percentage. The counties appropriate at" the rate of 12 1-2 cents ahead for the work, The calculation is easy, 5,774 at 12 1-2 cents each. The people of Granville county were slow to see the need of vacci nation and fell behind a majority of Uhe counties of the State. "OUR CIVIC FRD3NDS AND FOES" ELICITED APPLAUSE The unique little play given by the pupils of the sixth grade of the graded school, under the direction of Miss Jeannette Biggs, was great ly enjoyed by a large audience Mon day night at the Orpheum theatre. Such characters as the Fly, Waste Basket, Fire, Dirt, Dust, Disease and Death were forcibly portrayed by the pupils in costume. Next appeared our friends The Swatter, Paint, Brush, Broom, Soap and Wated directing the way for obliterating our foes. The costumea for these characters were most effec tive. The, program brought be tore the people Hhe importance of the clean up and paint-up campaign whirh is bcirif observed throughout the na tion beginning October 6th. The program was conch ded with an appropriate chorus well tender ed. THE UNIVERSITY IS FULL The Problem Now Is One of iRoom ing Accommodations. Like the various colleges of the State that have already opened for the Fall terms, the University of North Carolina is crowded to capa city, nearly 1,100 students, includ ing nearly 400 freshmen having en rolled Thursday, the first day. The problem now is one of rooming ac commodations for the young men. It is a prosperous year indeed that is promised the University, and a year of glorious opportunity for ser vice. VETERANS LEAVE TODAY FOR THE REUNION About 35 Granville county-veterans and 30 sons will entrain in Ox ford todays to attend the reunion in Atlanta. Capt. W, H. White, adju tant, is in command. Mayor of Raleigh Dead. The city of Raleigh, loses a noble citizen in the death of Mayor James I. Johnson, which occurred at Hot Springs last Friday. . The interment was in Oakwood cemetery, Raleigh, Monday. The funeral procession was more than one .mi.le long. . . . -It: certainly is to Jaugh when you hear a man with scarcely enough brain to be engineer vof a peanut cart - blowing about what he'd do if he were the ,?residenti . .-") -..-vfi ! 0:U il ! 1 i" :- "J 3 it t 1! 1 1 .41 It, si : r -Vil -it ",.'.''V". l' on - .. J. J,. '.V.il - -;! f.;- y .
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 7, 1919, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75