Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / June 17, 1947, 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
t THE PRINTED WORD is the only type of adver tising that may be re ferred to again and again —at will. xforJt VOL. 66 ESTABLISHED IN THE TEAK 1881 OXFORD. N. C. INVESTIGATE Granville County has many business and farm opportunities. Investi gate and then invest. TUESDAY AND FRIDAY NO. 48 Farm Accidents Take Great Toll David S. We?;rer Calls For Greater Care in Prevention of Accidents During the one hour you take for dinner each day, two farm residents will be accidentally killed and 205 injured, according to David S. Weav- <1, head of the Agricultiu-eal En gineering department at State Col lege. In giving these facts that were found by the National Safety Coun cil, Proessor Weaver advises the use of good common sense in keeping down the accident tolls this year. In 1946, about 4,500 farm work ers ware killed and approximately 300.000 farm workers were injured. During the same year it is estimated that motor vehicle deaths to farm residents increased about 1,000 over 1945. Unless extra precautions are taken this year, one out of every 10 farm ers will suffer a disabling injury, either on or off the job. One out of every 350 farm families will suffer the pain and sorrow which accom pany accidental deaths. Fifty-two farm people will die as a result of accidents every day, and a disabling injury will strike some farmer in the United States every minute. How can farm accidents be pre vented? Farm safety is particularly a family affair because, unlike the urban dweller, the family is so closely associated with the actual opt^rations of farming. Common sense tells us, for example, that children have no more right to be near or on a piece of operating farm machinery than city children have to be around a punch press d?' a moving locomotive; they have no more business driving a tractor than city children have behind the wheel of a 100 horsepower passenger auto mobile. Many accidents can be prevented if each family will learn what hai‘ srds menance their lives at home, at work and on the highway; what each member of the family can do to elim inate as many of these hazards as possible; and that carelessness on the part of any member of the fami ly perils the lives and happiness of Granville Students Win Radio Contest Two students of this county, one of them in Creedmoor School and the other in Oak Hill School, were among the 500 who wrote best let ters in the national “Best Teacher’' contest sponsored by the Quiz Kids radio program. O. W. Williams, age 10, of Roiite 4. Oxford, whose teacher is Mrs. Uilia Blackwell Williams of Oak Hill School, and Ruth Jeanne Allen, 13 Houte 1, Creedmoor, whose teacher is Miss Marie Jenkins, were the Oranville winners. About 33,000 letters were submitt ed in the contest. The Granville winners each received $1.00. ■ ^ OXFORD GRANGE TO MEET TUESDAY NIGHT Oxford Grange is to meet Tuesday right at the Test Farm at 8 o’clock. An interesting program has been planned. SHORT SHORTS —Budget cuts ranging from 30 per cent for the Atomic Energy Commission to 1.8 per cent for the Veterans Administration have been ordered by the House Appropria tions Committee. —President Truman has returned to Washington from his good-will mission to Canada to tackle con troversial labor curbing and tax cutting bills now awaiting his ap proval or rejection. —^Russia has warned that the United States commission on con ventional armaments might fail on its assigned task unless it accepts a Soviet demand to link the atomic control problem with arms limita tion. —A bill raising rents 15 per cent if both landlord and tenant agree on a two-year lease has been ap proved by a Senate-House con ference committee. The measure, a compromise between differing House and Senate bills, would extend rent control through next Feb. 29. —Joseph E. Tharrington, 54, for mer insurance salesman in Winston- Salem, was sentenced the past week to serve 20 to ,?5 years in State Pris on for second degree murder in the claying of his wife, Mrs. Carrie York Tharrington, 47, May 7. Thar- rington’s attorneys gave notice of appeal to the State Supreme Court. —If the United States deals with Russia by holding fast to princi ples beyond which it will not be pushed, this nation’s will be respect ed by other nations and ultimately by the Russians, Herschel V. John son, alternate U. S. Memeber of the United Nations Security Council, told delegates to the annual jud icial circuit Court of Appeals in Asheville. Johnson, a native of •Charlotte, said he did not advocate ^‘^oftness toward Russia.” Tom Allen Says Tobacco Crop In South Caro, Poor Granville Man Tells of Trip Through Tobacco Area to Myrtle Beach Thomas W. Allen spent the past week attending the meeting of the Production Credit Association at Wrightsville Beach and the Bright Belt Warehouse Association, as rep resentative of the State Grange, at Myrtle Beach. Allen, prominent in tobacco cir cles of North Carolina and a mem ber of Secretary Anderson’s Tobacco Advisory Committee, said that he observed between Oxford and Myrt le Beach, “the most inferior crops of tobacco I've ever seen at this time of year.” Shortage of plants in the Border Belt and the South Carolina flue- cured area has resulted in a spotty crop which is likely to yield a small poundage, Allen said. He said he saw growers replanting in some fields where a part of the crop was practically ready for priming. Governor Names Wildlife Body Chairman and Salaried Direc tor to Be Named at Meeting in Raleigh June 18 Governor R. Gregg Cherry this week named the nine members of the Norh Carolina Wildlife Re sources Commission, which on July 1 will take over the functions now performed.by the Division of Game and Inland Fisheries. The members were appointed by terms, three for two years, three for Geographical districts to staggered four years and three for six year terms. The two year appointees are Joseph R. Winslow of Roberson- ville, farmer; Thomas J. White of Kinston, attorney; S. B. Coley of Raleigh, insurance executive; for four year terms: Harry A. Greene of Raeford, legislator; Frank T. Erwin of EKirham, oil distributor; D. K. Sing of Charlotte, business man; four six year terms: R. Floyd Crouse of Sparta, attorney; George W. Keesee of Gastonia, manufact urer ; Dan M. Purr of Asheville, contractor. The new commission will meet June 18 in the Governor’s office to be sworn in and to elect a chairman and a salaried director. First 1947 Peaches Offered on Market First 1947 crop of peaches were offered here this week and sellers were asking 75 cents for a small basket. The fruit was of good size and of good color. The price forbid a sampling. Meanwhile, Frank Parker, head of the Federal-State Crop Report ing Service, says prospects point to a North Carolina peach crop this year of 3,383,000 bushels, or about seven per cent more than the 1946 harvest Parker says the Sandhills crop shows “good promise.” The outlook on production of apples is uncertain at this time. Orphanage Youths Guests At Circus Family of 300 Children At tend Shrine Entertainment In Henderson Three hurdred children, members of the family of Oxford Orphanage, were guests Monday afternoon of Henderson Shrine Club at the Shrine Circus currently showing in the Athletic Stadium there. The children, from the smallest to the largest, piled into a string of busses on the campus at noon Monday and with patrol escort, traveled in convoy to Henderson for a special showing of the circus. It was perhaps the first time in years that the entire student body ; has been taken to an out-of-town j entertainment. The youths, accom- i panied by cottage counsellors and I other workers, had the “time of their lives” as they watched the antics of the clowns, the perform ing acrobats and other unusual 1 attractions. Superintendent A. D. Leon Gray arranged for the children to at tend the circus as the invitation of Henderson Shriners. Peace’s Chape! To Have Revival Rev. Grady Buchanan to As sist Rev. E. G. Usry in Daily Services Four - H Members Harrison Talks Enter Camp Today j At Lions Meet Granville Boys and Girls to Fireman Says Town Has Bet- Spend Remainder of Week at Millstone More than 50 4-H Club members from Granville County will leave at 7:30 this morning for Camp Mill stone, near Rockingham, where they will spend the remainder of the week. The Granville group is to share the camp with 4-H Club members from Person County. An interesting daily routine of work and play has been planned, with the campers sharing in the responsibility of the camp. Accompanying the Granville party will be Mrs. G. P. Wilkinson, Jr., Miss Virginia Moss, W. B. Jones, Tom Puller, Mrs. Rndolph Cheat ham, Thelma Clark, George Skin ner Averett and Mrs. N. C. Brum- mitt. Club members who have made camp reservations are: Berea—^Re becca Currin, Margaret Elliott, Doris Bullock, Bobby Jean Adcock, Hazel Sherman, Alma Hobgood, Bill Jones, Jr., Edgar Morton, S. Elam Hobgood, Roger Currin and Mildred Sher man. Enon—Jacquetta Baker and Prank Baker. Dickerson — Barbara Kittrell. Owen Cheatham, Billy Kittrell and Richard Harris, Jr. Creedmoor — Nancy Whitfield, Mary Ann Lanier, Marjorie White, Ann McIntosh, Genny Knott, Jo Ann Roberts, Janet Garner, Jackie Currin, Jimmy Curl, Gordon Marks. Bobby Lewis Newton, Junior New ton, James Lewis Keith, Jimmy Thompson, Robert Rogers, Bill Dixon, Jack Green and Larry Ben nett. Wilton—Ann Brummitt, Elmo Gooch, Patsy Brummitt and Jasper Stem. ’ ‘ Salem — Betsy Hobgood, Ann Jcritcher Dan Critcher and Julian Oakes. Oak-Hill — Frances Wilkinson, Pratt Winston, Alex Winston, Lon nie Wright, Jr., Sam Williamson, Lawrence Clark and Carol Winston. Stovall—Betty Blackwell and Her bert Grissom. Stem—Gertrude Wilkins, Biily EUis and Edward Mangiun. ter than Eig^t-Hour Supply of Water in Storage In talks designed to show .the adequacy of Oxford’s water system and fire fighting, apparatus, G. R. Harrison and Aleck Overton toid the Lions Club here Thursday night I many interesting things about the Town’s water works. I Mr. Harrison^ veteran all-time -fireman, told members of the Club ! that in municipal and auxiliary j storage tanks, which would be made available to the Town of Oxford on short notice in the event of an emergency, 900,000 gallons of water is kept in storage. ' “Using all of the fire fighting equiptment we possess at full ca pacity, it would take eight hours and 34 minutes to exhaust this re serve of water,” Harrison said. “During that eight and one-half hour period, filter facilities would have processed 433,500 gallons of vater to meet normal usage,” he added. Overton, who presented Mx. Har rison and was in charge of the pro gram, told of the location of princi pal water mains in the city and of the strategic location of hydrants from which firemen may draw water in the event of need. Nearly |1,400 In Municipal Court rhirty-Eigiht Arrets for Pub lic Drunkenness Made Dur ing Past Month Funeral Rites Today For Prominent Citizen H. Lewis Dies On Mountain Visit Rev. Henry Johnston to Con duct Services at 4 o’clock at St. Stephen’s Church Tobacco Acreage Is Being Checked Penalty of 19 Cents Pound Provided on Excess To bacco in 1947 Crop Measurement of approximately 23,000 acres of tobacco in Granville County was begun the past week by some 20 compliance supervisors em ployed by the Production and Marketing Administration, Chair man Roy D. Jones announced yes terday. Jones said that under regulations established by PMA, every acre of tobacco will be measured. The PMA will not order destruction of acre age grown in excess of allotment, but growers failing to destroy will be subject to a penalty of 19 cents a pound and also will be ineligible to participate in the price support program of the Stabilization Corp oration. Members of the coxuity committee said the compliance supervisors are being paid on an acreage basis and that cooperation and help from in dividual farmers would speed their work to an early finish. ■» Navy Recruiters To Be Here on Thursday Navy recruiters now are paying calls to the post office here each Thursday. From 8:30 until 5 on Thursday of this week, C. L. Harrison, Jr., PhM 1-C, and W. M. Moore, GM 2-C, working out of the Raleigh Naval Recruiing office, will be at the post office here to discuss the navy with eligible men and women. Mr. and Mrs. Moore To Reside in City Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Moore have arrived from Orangeburg, S. C., to make their home and they are now residing on Raleigh Road. Mr. Moore is connected with American Tobacco Company. They have a daughter Rose, and a son, Ken. i The annual Summer revival at j Peace’s Chapel Church is to open on I Sunday morning with the Rev. Gra- ! dy Buchanan of Shreveport, La., as sisting the pastor, Rev. E. G. Usry, in the conduct of two services daily during the ensuing week. The first service is to be held ^ 11 o’clock Sunday morning and be ginning Monday, there is to be a service at 3 p. m. and another at 8 p. m. Mr. Buchanan is a native of this c^nty and was here last Summer on a visit. Swimming- Party and Picnic Close Union Bible School Friday Approximately 125 children and a large number of parents and friends enjoyed a swimming party and picnic at The Pines at noon Friday as the closing feature of the Union Vacation Bible School. The children presented a program at the Methodist Church from 11 to 12 o'clock, showing results of mucn fine training during the week. Thereafter, the children and their parents, at the invitation of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Mayes, went to the park and enjoyed swimming and then a bountiful picnic dinner. BOY BITTEN BY MAD DOG James P. Morgan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robt. L. Morgan of Henderson, was bitten by a mad dog on June 10. The Morgans are former resi dents of this county. Nettie Day To Enter University in Fall Miss Nettis Day has been granted a scholarship at the University of North Carolina and will enter school there in September to begin wark on her Master’s Degree. Miss Day, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Day, now is employed by Parmer’s Home Administration in Roxboro as home supervisor. She plans to pursue her degree in Public Health Education. Miss Day holds her BS degree from Woman’s College. Greensboro. » Tobacco Referendum Planned for July 12 In a meeting here Saturday morn ing, members of the Production and Marketing Administration county committele made prelimi nary plans for the referedum to be held July 12 on farmer support of Tobacco Associates, Inc. Tobacco Assoclats, Inc., recently formed to provide for development of export and other tobacco mar kets, has legislative sanction and growers will have opportunity in the referedum to determine whether they will levy a small fee on their tobacco acreage allotment for sup port of the corporation. — ' I' ■ A —...I — — FIRST RIPE TOMATO Henderson Party Visits in County DICKERSON, June 16. — Mrs. Harry Bryan Sr., Mrs. Walter Vaughn and Mrs. John Floyd of Henderson, visited the W. O. Cheat ham Family Friday afternoon. Mary Catherine Quick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Quick, un derwent an operation for appendici tis at Granville Hospital Saturday afternoon. Miss Elnora Floyd has returned to Henderson after having spent a month with her sister, Mrs. W. O. Cheatham. Emmett Wrenn of Oxford, spent last week with his grandmother, Mrs. Minnie Wrenn. Miss Raye Cheatham was the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Mac Averett of the Enon Commu nity. 4-H Club members from the Dick erson club camping at Camp Mill stone this week are Richard Harris Jr., Owen Cheatham, Billy and Bar bara Kittrell, and ’ Mrs. Rudolfs? Cheatham. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hunt Jones and children, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bofl- cher and children, and Millard Alan Brummitt retiuned on Sunday from White Lake where they spent a few days vacation. Junior Order To Have Call Meeting Friday There is to be a call meeting of Granville Council No. 117, Junior Order of United Ametican Mechan ics, held in the Odd Fellows Hall on Friday night, June 20, according to F. S. Leavister, Councilor. “This meeting is called for degree work and a large attendance is expected. Those who come early are assured of a seat,” Leavister said. BOYDTON HERE WEDNESDAY Oxford Dodgers will play Boyd- ton, Va., at Oxford Park at 3:30 o’clock Wednesday afternoon. Mayor’s Court, for the month ending June 10, collected $1,397.75 in fines and costs, and the Police Record shows a large number of arrests. There were 38 arrests for public j drunkenness during the month and 22 for speeding, eight for improper brakes, several for illegal posses sion and similar violations. Of the total. $282 was paid in State costs, $635.75 in Town costs ‘ and in fines. Cancer Fund Coin Box Stolen From Local Post Office There still are some dishonest people around, according to School Superintendent B. D. Bimn. The past week Mr. Bunn and members (jf his Rotary Committee collected to coin collectors put in public places in connection with the Cancer Control Fund drive. Days ago, the collection box plac ed in the post office was removed, and with it went the money which had been deposited there by those supporting the drive. If the thief should be identified, and should ever need help from the North Carolina Field Army for for the control of cancer—well, it wouldn’t be necessary to steal the help. Rev. Roger Williams Addresses Rotarians In an address before the Rotary Club here Thursday evening, Rev. Roger Williams, missionary to the Flat River Baptist Association, em phasized the importance of “first j Things first.” I The speaker was presented by Thomas B. Currin of the program committee. : Mr. Williams, a new-comer to I this community, said God should be first in all things, one’s neighbor [ should get second consideration, I and that self should be in third place. A ARCHIE KEELS ARRIVING FOR VACATION Mrs. Brantley Visits Her Sister Beverly Rogers Injured In Automobile Accident— Other Creedmoor News Archie Keels will arrive by plane in New York June 22 for a vacation at home. Mr. Keels has been in Greece for the past several months, engaged in the tobacco industry. Mrs. Keels will meet him in New York. C. B. Gordon picked his first ripe tomato from his garden crop last Friday. Within the next lew days, Mr. Gordon expects to have a good supply of home-grown tomatoes. CHANGES REVEALED IN HEADS OF GRANVILLE HIGH SCHOOLS Return of a former principal to Wilton, election of a new principal at Stovall and resignation of the Oak Hill principal were disclosed yesterday by School Superintendent B. D. Eunn. Elbert L. Veasey, who entered ac tive service in the Medical Admin istrative Corps of the Army in 1942 and attained the rank of major, is returning to his former position as principal of Wilton High School. S. B. Murray^ who has been prin cipal at Wilton since Veasey don ned uniform, has been elected prin cipal of Junior high school in Hen derson and plans to move to Hen derson from Wilton. I Thornton Stovall^ principal of Stovall High during’ the past year, I resigned as principal and is remain- j ing- as a member of the faculty of the school. He is being succeeded as principal by W. C. Poe, who serv ed schools in Granville a number of years ago. More recently, Mr. Poe has been principal of Aycock School in Vance county and in school work at Carthage. He formerly was at Wilton and Berea schools in this county. H. E. Rose, principal of Oak Hill during the past year, has been elect ed principal of Aycock school in Vance County and the Oak Hill place has not yet been filled. Super intendent Bunn said. CREEDMOOR, June 16. — Mrs. Mary Powell Brantley, a member of the faculty of Hugh Morson High iSonool in Raleigh, spent the week end with her sister, Mrs. John H. Newell and Mr. Newell. Miss Lucille Bullock has accepted a position with a furniture company in Durham. Mr. and Mrs. O.. B. Stanfield were in Burlington on Wednesday .-Ltending the uneral of a relative. Mr. and Mrs. Garland Daniel and son, James, left this week for Mur ray, Ky., where they will spend sev eral weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Joe E. Bryant. Mrs. Bryant is the former Miss Lydia Mae Daniel. Sgt. J. K. Morton, stationed at Port Benning, Ga., was a week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Otha Gupton. Miss Marie Dixon left Thursday for Georgia where she will visit rel atives. Miss Edith Fleming, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Fleming, is spending her vacation in New York City. Mrs. L. B. Bobbitt has been a pa tient at Watts Hospital, Durham, for the past 10 days. Miss Grace Cockerham is spend ing her vacation in Western North Carolina. The condition of Beverly Rogers, victim of an automobile accident on Friday night, is improving. Mr. Ro gers is able to be at home. C. B. Mangum underwent an op eration Thursday at Watts Hospital. Mrs. Carrie Garner is a patient at Watts Hospital^ Durham. Mr. and Mrs. Graham Lawrence and family spent the week-end with relatives in Beidsville. John Dailey Lyon and Mary Grarft Lyon of 'Granite Palls, are here spending several weeks with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Lyon. John H. Newell is spending tffls week in Warrenton as the guest of relatives. Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Wenzel and daughter, Terrianne Alene, left Thursday for their home in Mil waukee, Wisc._ after a visit with Mrs. Wenzel’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Jones. Mr. and Mrs. William Terry of Oxford, spent the week-end with Mrs. Terry’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bullock. Mrs. Castlebury Visits Winstons Mrs. L. D. Castlebury of Raleigh, has been visiting her great-grand daughter, Mrs. R. W. Winston, and family here for two weeks. Mrs. Castlebury, who is in her 96th year, is quite active and her mind and sight are both crystal clear. Although she did not join the youngsters in swimming in May’s Park last Friday morning, she was present for the Union Vacation Bible School picnic and joined en thusiastically in the outing. Mrs. Castlebury is Mrs. Winston’s ma ternal great-grandmother. Lawrence Blackwell Gets Marine Release Private First Class Lawrence Hughes Blackwell, son of iMrs. C. M. Blackwell, Route 3, Oxford, was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps on June 12. PPG Blackwell has been stationed at the U. S. Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, North Carolina. Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Hines, Mrs. Lowell Hudson, OVIrs. D. K. Taylor and Mrs. E. H. Crenshaw attended the wedding of Miss Mary Elizabeth Russell and William Russell in Clarksville, Va., Saturday^iight. ^ The sudden and unexpected death Sunday afternoon of R. H. Lewis, prominent Oxford citizen and a business and civic leader here for many years, brought profound grief to countless friends and acquaint ances in this section. Mr. Lewis died at Fletcher, where he had gone a few days earlier with Mrs. Lewis, for a short rest. He was I 69. The body was expected to arrive here about 5 o’clock Monday after noon. The funeral has been planned I for 4 o’clock Tuesday atemoon at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church. Rev. Henry Johnston, rector, is to of ficiate and interment is to be in Elmwood Cemetery. Resident 40 Years Mr. Lewis came to Oxford in 1908, “en years' after his graduation at the University of North Carolina, to become associated with the Oxford Cotton Mill, of which he was presl- ; dent or many years. A native of Raleigh, a son of Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Lewis of that place, in the years he had resided in Ox ford Mr. Lewis had been an active participant in many business, civic, i religious and other enterprises. I ^e had or many years been a I director of Oxford National Bank j and also chairman of the board of j the bank. For more than a quarter ' century he was a member and treas urer of the Board of Graded School Trustees and a pioneer in advocat ing public school development. It , was during his service on the board [ that the brick school buildings were 1 erected in the Oxford school system. ■ Prominent Churchman For approximately 30 years Mr. ' Lewis served as treasurer of St. I Stephen’s Church here, of which he I was a vestryman for many years. He also had served as senior warden I and at the thne of his death was a j member of the Standing Committee I and a former chairman of finance ; for the Executive Council of the Di ocese of North Carolina. A former trustee of the University of North Carolina, he was a loyal alumnus. He was a trustee of St. Mail’s School, Raleigh, a lay read er and custodian of valuable records of St. Stephen’s Church here, and a member of the Board of Trustees of Granville Hospital. In civic life of the community, Mr. Lewis was a past president and a charter member of the Oxford Rot ary Club. He was a former president of Occoneechee Council of Boy Scouts and had served on many im portant committees of the Scout or-, ganization. The Survivors Surviving Mr. Lewis are his wife,, the former Mary Weldon Huske of Fayetteville, two daughters, Mrs. R. W. Taylor of Oxford and Mrs. Rus sell Parham of Henderson, and a two brothers, K. P. Lewis of Durham, two brothers, K. P. ewis of Durham and Dr. Ivey Lewis of Charlottes ville Va., and a sister, Miss Nell Bat tle Lewis of Raleigh, and four grand children. Chamber Official In New York City Secretary R. B. Moore of the Granville County Chamber of Com merce is combining his vacation with business. Moore left Friday to spend a few days in New York. While there he expects to interview some Indust rial heads on the possibilties of locating plants in this county. Midland Fabrics, a New York con cern which considered establishing a plant here, has since located in another section of the State were the firm was able to get a building, Moore said. Desserts Appear On Family Tables Home-made candy, ice cream, cake with thick icing, cookies and ether items in which sugar is need ed, made their appearance on fami ly tables during the week-end. Sugar was removed from ration ing the past week and there was a quick effort to supply some of those things the family has been missing in quantity since the start of sugar rationing. Merchants here reported heavy sales of sugar the latter part of the week. “You can get all you want,” merchants told their customers over and over as they handed over bag after bag to purchasers. A COTTON MILL TO CLOSE FOR THREE HOURS Oxford Cotton Mill will be closed from 3 to 6 o’clock Tuesday after noon out of respect for R. H. Lewis, whose death occurred Sunday. Mrs. Albert Clay has accepted a position with Victory Beauty Shop.
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 17, 1947, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75