Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / Jan. 9, 1920, edition 1 / Page 1
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Ik Mill mm :-! 4 I oxfoi public ledger- 9 VOLUME XXXV MOONSHINERS NOT AS NUMEROUS AS YEAR AGO Eigteen Stills .Captured In Decem- ber 191S and Only Five in Decem ber 1919. It was generally believed that moonshiners are more numerous in; Granville county now than they were one or two years ago, but the rec ords point to the fact that the moon shniers are being put out of busi ness. During December 1918, the first month of Sheriff Hunt's term of of fice, he captured 18 stills. He had expected to do a larger business along that line during December of the old year, but live stills were all that he could get his hands on. The new year opens up good and strong with a record of three stills captured by Sheriff Hunt to date. On January 3rd Deputy Lyon, with the assistance of Officers Curl and Dav is made a trip to Dutchville and captured and destroyed 600 gallons of beer. The still had been moved before the officers reached the scene of several week's action. On January 6th the same officers made a rade on a still near Wilkins and captured and destroyed 1,000 gallons of beer. The moonshiners were just gettnig ready to place the still in position and do business, but they evidently got wind in some way that the officers were in the woods and they took the still with them, leaving the beer in a state of fer mentation. MR. LUTHER 15. CREWS WILL MOVE TO OXFORD Pays $7,500 tor Main Street Property. Mr. Luther B. Crews, of Salem j township, who sold his place and moved to Durham a few months ago, has purchased a handsome residen tial property on Main street and will niiiVp his home in Oxford. The property acquired by Mr. Crews was the estate of the Halls, j and at the death of Miss Sue Han aiw. Watkms, a. u. mis. few months ago the property was! Brassfield G. tT. Allen, C. placed upon the market. Floyd, W. H. Garner. The property is situated at the! Dutchville S. A. Fleming, W. corner cf Main" and Sycamore streets j Suit, J. T. Aiken, and adjoins the home place of Mr. . Tally Ho W. S. Gooch. E. John Webb. The purchasing price Clement, L. L. Crews. was s.juu 5 00 With the expenditure! of $2,500 in the way of improve ments, Mr. Crews will have one of the handsomest . homes in Oxford,, Mr. Crews has accepted a posi tion with the Lyon-Winston Com pany and will move his family to Oxford at an early date. EVERY GRAVE RECORD IN FRAN RE BEING RECHECKED There WiU Be Very Few Unidetified : Graves When Work Is Completed, i (Paris Special) j Amnrioon nvrnv nft PeTS hf UeVe ! vcrv few unidentified bodies will lie j fiTM'injr Amp-rim. 'a soldier dead in i France when the army Graves Reg istration Service completes a thor ough recheeking of records now in progress Nearlv 70.000 American boys are iw-r.rl in V.o olcvpii rlistrir'ts nt h'r- .,i, n,1V,nHir.fLM,ic nnHitn a. $25,000 school bond issue. tk two are 38 cemeteries of 300 or more graves cared for by discharged sol-i tv, in,w f twoia agpe, north of Verdun where lie 23 ,'Burwell, H. C. . 1 ' i 000 of our men. The next in size! Oflicial bond is tnat at Tniaucouri wim t ThiMPonrt vn 4 buU ! srraves. Many cf those TT-bn fpll in battle are pleening in British and Frvnch military or the French cora mnii?l. cemeteries. A few were left whore they were first put in the gr ound, as in the Vosges mountains. OF CENSUS IS UNDER WAY HERE List For County Townships Have Kti !lppn A ii mi nred Persons who have qualified and T-T.r. Koon nnnr.iiit hv thf! clis- trir-t supervisor, began this week their rounds of visitations in the county in taking the 1920 census. It is the regular decennial count ma de, by uncle Sam all ever the United Siates of 'his large family of people, men, women and boys and girls. The Public Ledger is unable to se- cure a list 01 enumeraiurs m umu ville County, and we are not advised that thr. organization for the worn in thp c.onntv is complete. Mr. D. T. Perkins , we learn, is one ot tne enumerators. Mr. John Graham Webb, it is said, will assist with the work in Oxford. HOG MARKET QUOTATIONS. The following hog market quota tions are given as reported unoffici ally to the North Carolina Division of Markets. The Wilmington quo tations were given by one of the t that, nlace. the Richmond and Baltimore quotations WUVIV1UH t'lUK VJ -v v - A by live stock commission merchants! at these markets. Wilmington Hard hogs weighing from 165 to 350 pounds, $14 to $15 per hundred. Richmond Good ,corn hogs, weighing from 125 to 225, $16 per hundred. Baltimore Heavies, 200 to 300, $16 to 16.20 per hundred. STOCKHOLDERS MEETING Regular annuel meeting of the stockholders of National Bank of Granville will be held in its office Tuesday, January 13, 1920 at 12 o'clock. W. T. YANCEY, Cashier. PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY-TOWN AND COUNTY OFFER BRILLIANT OPPORTUNITIES-AIL HOME PRINT. i . ' . . COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS HOLD THFIR INITIAL iHii!TTVfi t v i in x ttyj Supervisors Want School Districts Election Road pointed. More Pay Two Will Hold Bond Supervisors Ap- The County Board of Commission ers met on Monday, January 5, the following members being present: Messrs J. Ennis Davis, Chairman; B. I. Breedlove, J. T. Averett, J. L. Peed, W. E. Cannady. Office of Health Officer Mr. A. W, Graham, Jr., was al lowed $12.50 per month for rent of Dr. Morris' office, he to be respon sible for light and water. Protected by Insurance The following motion was adopt-1 ed: That $8,000 additional insur ance be taken out, $7,00 to cover main building at the Home of the aged and infirm and $1,000 on the superintendent's building. As Mr. J. L. Peed' represented several in surance companies, and did not have any of the county's insurance, it was ordered by the commissioners that he be given the policies. The Pauper List This being the time to revise the outside pauper list, which had the attention of the board, the clerk was ordered to draw orders. Rachel Thorpe was ordered placed on the outside pauper list. i Lizzie Garret was admitted to the Home of the Aged and Infirm. The Supervisor's Pay The question as tc- raising the sup revisor's pay was taken up. The board could do nothing in regard to the matter, as the law fixes the pay. The board, however, called in Mr. D. G. Brummitt, and he said that he would take the matter up at the next meeting of the legislature, which will convene during the com ing summer, and see if he could get their pay increased to at least as much as that of the overseers, which i is $b.uu Road Supervisors Fishing Creek W. E. Downey, J. N. E. M. i A. walnut u-rove c r. uwu, v. Sherman, Win. Thorpe. Oak Hill J. S. Watkins, H. S. Hart,, A.. J. Yancey. . , Sassafras Fork R. T. Gregory,' J. G. Morton, H. Gregory. Salem L. G. Breedlove, E. A. Hunt, Edward Crews. Oxford Same as in 1919. Tar River School District An election was ordered to be held in Tar River School District, to as- sertain the wishes of the people as to a $10,000 school bond issue. Proposed tax rate of 15 cents on tne 1UU. ailU ta-tems The registrars are: L. Y. Gordon, Adcock. The February 14, L. L. Crews, L. E election to be held 1920. Stovall School District There was an election ordered to be held in Stovall school district to asseriaui ixie wisucs of the people as Pvnnnserl tax rate 15-cents on the $100, and 45-cents on the poll. Ine election is to be held February 14, T?nm-!1!120. The registrars are. D. A. McGhee. v. vx. iuwcn, xx.t.iocv... presented HIS OlllCiai uunu, mui;fii1!WL. xxa ivi uuy i.i WaS IOUlia lu U ,u,n.sJ.c. -. j u. acceptable. County Hoarders Mr. Conrad Walters was alowed $35. per month for feeding the pris oners in the county jail in adition to what he now receives. A ppointert Con stable The board appointed Mr. E. A. T on constable of Oxford townsnip. Resolution Adopted j The board adopted the following I rnl U t i Oil '. "Be IS reSOlVCd Ulc hnoTH rf nnnimisaioners 01 uranviiie county that the superintendent ot the County Home and the health of ficer of Granville county be inform ed that this board by resolutions hereby adopted, instructs said sup erintendent and health officer that hereafter all inmates of the county 1 with infectious di- j sease shall be segregated r om. , o n (other inmates oisuu j in such a way and manner as not 10 j. x ,xrjv. nthpr in come in coutaui. wilii -"v wvw. mates of said County Home in any manner which might tend to spread the disease with winch such segre gated inmates are afflicted or com municate it to any other inmate. Persons who have the same disease may be permitted to associate with each other, but all persons who are afflicted with a different disease shall be segregated from all other intoc- hnth those who are not at- flicted at all as well as those who ) are not afflicted with thfe same ai- sease. RTCKETT ISSUES BlCKriii- u ANTI.RUM APPEAL Designates Sunday, January 18 as "Law Enforcement Day Raleigh, Jan. 8. Gov. Bickett is sued a proclamation citing the fact that conrHtutional prohibition be comes effective January 16 and get ting aside Sunday, January 18, as "Law Enforcement Day." On that day he requests that the congregations of the state assemble and that ministers preach sermons bearing on law enforcement. OXFORD, NORTH CAROLINA, I 1 H : GENTLEMEN THE JURY Drawn For February Term Granville County Superior Court First week L. M. Currin, R. L. Noblin, W. T. Hunt, R. R. Strother, Charlie May, M. B. McKing, B. T. Bull, W. B. Fowler, E. R. Crews, G. P. Roberts, J. H. Coley, Dr. R. G. Rogers, W. H. Upchurch, H. Hays, Ira Meadows, S. C. Norwood, H. A. McGhee, R. S. Montague, W. L. Cur rin, W. D. Adcock, W. F. Baker, G. B. Phillips, W. P. White, Aubrey Woodlief, A. P. Willimson, Harry Currin, 2. M. Overton, F. M. Pinnix, D. K. Taylor, D. P. Stroud, L. El liott, W. M. Moss, S. M. Green, D. F. Lane, A. J. Lillard, A. J. Ed wards. Second week Leroy Meadows, W. M. Bobbitt. E. C. Daniel. J. L. White, A. R. Frazier, Lewis Hart, John Elliott, Jess Oakley, M. M. West, J. H. Parrott, E. O. Gill, L. O. Goss, W. H. Britt, W. B. Adcock, Joe Satterwhite, E. M. Bowles, R. M. King, W. A. Wilkins. GO TO SCHOOLS An Old Law That Has Never Been Repealed. "Many superintend -mis (To not know that unclaimed fees or jurors and witnesses must 1 e paid tr the school fund," sis St-to Sri ermten dont Erool s. "These f-es amount j to a considerable s 'in d-! rinr tho coarse cf a year. In cne county alne the- amount is over $1,100. 'The law has been on the statute book since 1891 and has never been repealed. It is as followers: "All money due jurors and wit nesses which remain in the hands ,cf any clerks of the Superior court on the first day of January after the publication of the third annual re port of the said clerk showing the same, shall be turned over to the county treasurer for the use of the school fund of the county, and it is the duty of said clerk to indicate in his 'report any moneys so held by him for a period embracing the two annual reports. RECORD TOBACCO CROP FOR 1920 PREDICTED Preparations Being toade for Am ount Which Will Exceed Great 1918 Crop. The Kinston Free Press make; Hit! luumvms iJicuiJiiiui in iv'iww:. i U THE JUKI KKIjIKVFS PRATf fv Pnrn?c ttacI trs its ia9n rrnn nf.t' hflwii- L .i&MW-?' ai3 Prwv :rn.Hn: iifW' Srl8" wish to takeUilis vanced for the planing of the bU- srest tobacco crop the new bright! eaf belt has ever known, according 1 to tobacconists and planters here. The latter say "the thing will nm be overdone, but there n ill iindii.bt clly be a nominal fncreaso in :h reae over last oar.' Almost b, the time the last of the 1919 crop has been marketed, some weeks from now, the seed will be in the ground for the 1920 crop ii weather conditions are at all favorable. Cu'th ation this -rer will I:e the most painstaking ever known. The grower-; will take no jhinces with leaf of poor quality. AHhouiih prices for best toba ,zo exceeded all ex; eciations the past fall, the com moner grades did not sell at a mat- enally higher prie thri in 1918. The demand for the product vil! be heavy for years to come, the growers believe. They have dis covered hat the world is lung: r for the weed, but chat th w.rld is . - " - .,0 .a 1 ,..y..,L-. 1... 1 r;i.a:u iiic,ii, experts think, because the territory has almost a monu;.o!v cn best cl ' arette tobacco. x THE COUNTY FINANCES Every Cent Accounted For In the Statement Published in This Issue of the Public Ledger. To enable the people of the coun ty to see how the tax money has been spent, and for what purpose, the Board of Commissioners made out an itemized statement, which will be found in this issue of the Public Ledger. It is conceded on all sides that the present board is an able body of men; that they are conscientious and have the interests of the county at heart. On examining the financial state ment you may conclude that "this or that" was rather costly, but it is well to bear in mind that a dollar is only worth fifty cents. The com missioners are to be congratulated on the fine exhibit for the fiscal year ending December 1st, 1919. They accomplished much under adverse conditions. NOTED CAMPAIGN SPEAKER IN OXFORD NEXT MONDAY NIGHT Hon. Wayne B. Wheeler, leading attorney for the Anti-Saloon forces of the United States will speak at the Oxford Methodist church Monday night, January 12th, at 7:30. This is a rare opportunity to ' hear one of j the country's best speakers. At Washington, D. C. he framed the Constitutional Amendment and other legislation, which has with stood all opposition, and has been upheld by the supreme court of the United States. NOTICE Regular Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of the First National Bank, Oxford, N. C, will be held at the bank on Tuesday, January 13, 1920 at 12 o'clock noon. W. H. HUNT, President. FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1920 BELIEVES PEAK OF PRICES HAS NOW BEEN REACHED Federal Reserve Board Details Reas ons for Conclusion That Fall Must Soon Come. (Washington Special) The yer.r 1920 will pull down the cost of living several notches, bus iness reports from all over the coun tryto the federal reserve board in dicate. The inference running thr ough the board's resume of business conditions during the month of Dec ember, made public, is that the peak of high prices in many lines has been reached. High prices are now killing them selves, the board believes. The his toric law of supply and demand is again beginning to operate after be- i ing shelved during the war. The demand for many products is lessening for three reasons, the report shows: 1- r-"Very high prices are already beginning to produce a curtailment of buying power, the growth of busi ness being noticeable more in terms of dollars than in units of produc tion," 2 -General anxiety over how long the present prices will continue is apparent, indicating business in gen eral believes low prices are not far off- 3 Low foreign exchange rates probably will reduce exports and make necessary a readjustment of domestic .industry. The trend to stop buying because of -high prices is more noticeable in the towns than in the cities, the board reported. The present high cost of living is in all federal reserve districts re ferred to as an unquestionable men ace. Real estate values in general have reached their peak and in some dis tricts have started downward. This is i believed, will stimulate building to "relieve the housing shortage. APPRECIATIVE SOLDIERS Extends Thanks Through Mayor T. G. Stem Capt. Alston P. Rhett, command ing Second Provisional Platoon, writing from llocky Mour.t, N. C, January 1, to Major Swciii ilayor. of! , i , iportimity- j.o express to you, ami nirongu yen to the people of Oxford, the uian,. aad appreciation cf the officers and men ot this platoon tor tne nanasome Christmas gitt we received while in your community. By your kindness and attention shown us our Christmas was made a great deal brighter than otherwise would have been, and v;e will always have a warm spot in our hearts for your city. . MORE THAN TWO THOUSAND WAR DRIDES Our Soldiers Were Partial to The , French Girls. Two thousand, two hrndred and eighty-nine war brides of American soldiers have reached the United States, according to the Young Wo man's Christian Association, and they represent 16 nations- Eight hundred' and ninety-three do not sneak English, but approximately half of the total number have trades or professions and are celfzupport ing. The grand total includes 1,505 French brides, 426 Enlifrh, 47 Ir ish, 49 Belgian and 46 Scotch. ONE OF THE BIG EVENTS The President Will Turn the Rail roads Rack to Their Owners on March 1. One of the national events of the holiday season was tne proclamation of the President turning the rail roads back to their owners on March 1, 1920. The delay of Congress to pass remedial legislation mde it necessary for something to be done, hence the President took the matter in hand. His act'on seems to have met with general satisfaction with the leaders in both the ;.artier. and with the railroad officials. As a rule the general public is verv high ly pleased to know that railroad orners are so soon to manage their own property again. MORE THAN 1,000 DEAD AT COUZTLAN: RESULT OF SATURDAY'S EARTHQUAKE Three Hundred Reported Dead at Barranca Grande Casualties 2,000 or More. Mexico City, Jan. 8. Couzlan was destroyed by Saturday's earthquake with 2,000 casualties, including more than 1,000 dead, according to offi cial reports given out from Vera Cr- '. uz center, of disturbance. The. pntirfi erarrison at lecceio were killed or injured. The dead numbered 30 and the injured 60. Virtually all the roads in the sur rounding district were flooded or destroyed, according to the reports. Three hundred dead are reported at Barranca Grande, near Couztlan. STOCKHOLDERS MEETING The regular annual meeting of the stockholders of the Oxford Savings Bank and Trust Company will be held in its office Tuesday, aJnuary 13, 1920 at 12 o'cock W. T. xain CEY, Treasurer. SAN FRANCISCO THE PLACE AND JUNE 28 THE TIME FOR DEMOCRATIC CON. Washington, Jan. 9. San Francisco is the place and Mon day, June 28, at noon, is the time for the Democratic Con vention. William J. Bryant split open ly with President Wilson at the Jackson dinner here last night on the question of whether the Democratic party should make the League of Nations an issue at the next election. NEXT FEBRUARY WILL HAVE FIVE SUNDAYS It Has Been Forty Years Since This Occured In looking over Blum's Almanac for 1920 we find that February will have 5 Sundays. It has been 40 years since this has occurred. In 1880 there were five Sundays. There is only one lean year every 4th year and then the month must come in on Sunday and go out on Sunday in order to have five Sun days. In 1900 there was no leap day and it was not counted as leap year. The year is 365 days, 5 hours and 49 minutes in length. Eleven min utes are taken every year to make' the year 365 1-4 days lon; and every ( fourth year we have an extra day, or this was Julius Caesar's arrange ment. Where do those eleven min utes come from? They come from the future and are paid by or?.itinj leap year every 100 years. But if lea: year was omitted regularly every hundreth year, in the course of 400 years it is found that thell minutes taken each year will not only have been :aid bac1', but we would lose a whole day, so Pope Gregory XIII, who improved on Cae sar's calendar, in 1582 decreed that every centurial year divisible by four should be leap year. So we borrow 11 minutes each year, paying our borrowings back by emitting three leap years in three centurial years and square matters b having a leap year in the fourth centi-.rial year. Pope Gregory's arrangement is so exact that the borrowing- and pay ing back balance so closely that we borrow more than we pay back to the extent, of only one day in 2,8 GO ears- OATORD- CASEIJALL STAR WILL LAy,AGE :i;rCH.UOND LEAGUE Mr. Le Gooch, the well-known baseball star, has been eiected lu manage the Richmond team of the Virginia league. Mr. Gooch has played ball in the big leagues and he is well known and highly esteemed in baseball cir cles. In the world war he left Ox ford as a private and rose to the rank of first lieutenant and was a drill master at two of the canton ments. The Virginia league is made up of the following teams: .Richmond, Norfolk, Petersburg, Newport News, Wilson and Rocky Mount are seek ing admittance. Manager Gooch holds an impor tant position at the Mangum Ware house. He will leave for Richmond early in March to get his team in shape for the season. It is not def initely known where the team will train. MUST GIVE IN 1920 TAXES THIS MOONTH Period for Listing Lasts Until Feb ruary 20. Under the new law by the 1919 Legislature all tax listing of real estate, stocks, and private and per sonal property, heretofore done dur ing the month of May, and as of May 1, must hereafter be done during January, beginning with this month. The period for listing this year be gins January 20 and lasts one mon th, ending February 20. During that time all the belongings of indi viduals and firms must be given in the same as has been done in May in former years. This time prop erty must be listed as of January 1. The new arrangement puts the prop erty valuation scheme upon a basis of the calendar year. Mr. W. A. Parham, County tax assessor in the revaluation work, will name the list later in all of the nine townships of the County. Under the new law the farmers are exempt to the amount of $300 on agricultive implements and pro visions. Under the old law it was only $25. A NEW TOWN Myers Park, on- the Outskirts of Charlotte, Incorporated Myers Park, situated in the su burbs of Charlotte, where Horner's Military School is located, was in corporated Tuesday. The mayor is H. C. Gover, and the commissioners are J. P. Little, J. M. Harry and Dr. John S. Clifford. In seeking a charter, the following facts were setforth: .That the petition is signed by a majority of the resident qualified electors of the territory proposed to be organized into the town of Myers Park, to-wit 65. That the said pe tition contains the assessed valua tion of all the property in said ter ritory and the proposed name of the new town; that the said valuation of property according to the last tax assessment was in excess of $450,000 and the proposed name of the new town is Myrea Park. NUMBER 2 UNITED STATES IS SHORT ONE MILLION HOMES The Shortage Is Felt All Over The World. (Washington Special) A special from Washington says: The United States is short a mil lion homes. To provide them upon the basis of present price levels would involve an expenditure of ap proximately $3,000,000,000. These statements were made this week by Irving E. Macomber, vice president of the United States Housing Corpor ation, in an address which he made at Atlantic City to the third annual convention of the New Jersey -Real Estate League. People Living in Caves It is a condition which prevails in Europe as well as in the United States . Great Britain is spending hundreds of millions to provide hom es for the working classes, and cable dispatches during the past month have conveyed the interesting infor mation that in Rome the coliseum is being used as a tenement. That Berlin's dwelling Bureau has not ified newly married persons that there are no houses or apartments available for them, and has advised them to live with their parents, and that is Galicia thousands of people have to live in caves. Population Growing From statistical information avail able it would appear that the popu lation of the cities is growing at a rate three times as fast as the popu lation in country districts, and it is confidently expected by those who are competent to judge that the 1920 census will disclose the fact that more than 50 per cent of our population is in city centers. Previous to the war about one bil lion dollars were expanded every year in industria 1 housing in the United States. During the war building operations were, for various and obvious reasons, practically suspended, and such housing as was created furnished by government agencies. It is safe to assume that this new housing did not at any time exceed 10 per cent of normal. It Costs More To liuilil From the statistical studs ude by the United States Housing Cor poration the cost of residential hous ing is probably about 70 per cent higher -in 191y than in , 1913. THE POiJilCAL OUTLOOK . Ma -Ghi M. Jta Iman'.lM-in the Ring. N?ws fnnier, from Washington. that Cangressman Stedrnan, of the fifth North Carolina district, will again enter the race for congress The opening of the new year is giving more interest to he raco for the Democratic nomination for gov ernor in North Carolina. The elec tion of Hoey to conres;: will prol -ably lose a few votes for Gardner. One well posted politician in the ninth distrct expressed the opinion that Morrison might earry that dis trict by a small majority, but that was not sure. While he has net established headquarters nor does he seem to have an organized campaign under way, it is rather noticealle .lhat in every group where the race is under discussion you will hear an expres sion that Page is the man the others will have to beat. There is a grow ing sentiment that North Carolina needs a business administration con ducted by a business man. Oratori cal governors are not as popular as they once were, and the peoi le are going to expect more work of a con structive nature and less fourth of July sneaking. With that senti ment. The Presidential bee is buzzing about William Jennings Bryant's head, but that is all that it is doing: just buzzing. .hi ACTIVE ON HIS FEET Capt. Will Fleming Was a Close Second. Mr. Walter Howell, of Fairport caught a rabbit and brought it to Oxford Wednesday and turned it loose in the street at the monument. It was stiputated that whoever cau ght the rabbit might have it. It was shortly after one o'clock when Mollie Cottontail was liber ated. The street was thronged with people. The rabbit surveyed the crowd with a critical eye and darted for an opening. Capt. Will Flem ing and Mr. Pete Wood were the most active chasers and Pete Wood caught the rabbit on a tecnicality. To prolong the excitement, Mr. Wood turned the rabbit loose. The rabbit saw a little round hole in the foundation of an old house on the north side of Williamsboro street and made a bee-line for the ancient structure. He hit the hole like a bullet and has not been seen since. MRS. P. B. SNEED IS DEAD AT WILLIAMSBORO HOME Funeral Services Will Be Held at 2 O'clock This Friday Afternoon at Island Creek Church. Mrs. P. B. Sneed, a well known lady of the Williamsboro section, died at her home Wednesday after noon at 2 o'clock following an illness lasting for several weeks. The fun eral is announced to be held at Is land Creek Baptist church this Fri day afternoon- at 2 o'clock. The family asks that friends and relatives be present. it i It, : -
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
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Jan. 9, 1920, edition 1
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