Newspapers / The Chronicle (Wilkesboro, N.C.) / March 10, 1909, edition 1 / Page 2
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V MARCH. - i ' -. .... Who's afraid of your cold and blowing Of your wind and hall and blowing, March f Do the worst that you can do, sir, Bare and blow! " But don't I know That the spring is just a-spring ? That song sparrow younder singing Told me so. While you're howling, yowling, squalling I can hear the robins calling, Spring 1 Something new comes with each comer Bluebird brings a bit of summer On his wing. Rave, old wird, your roar and bluster Pa. n't scare tussv-willow's cl aster. Drowsy wood chucks rouse from sleeping, Wild arbutus Tines are creeping. Snow-fed mountain brooks are leaping To the lake All the world stirs, shyly peeping, Half awake. Farm Journal. Mineral Waters a Menance to Health. Dr. Richard H. Lewis, secretary of the State Board of Health and one of the most widely known phy sicians in North Carolina, is press ing a Senate bill that looks to the eventual suppression of the sale of certain mineral waters that are a menance to health. The bill passed the Senate by a unanimous vote and Dr. Lewis is now directing his atten tion to the House. In a communi cation addressed to its members he made this statement, which will sur prise even the best informed of the medical profession. "Analysis of forty-four samples of bottled waters on the market has shown thirty out of the forty-four to be infected with the intestinal bacilli and, therefore, according to water standards, dangerous to health. These samples came from twenty-nine different springs and of this number fifteen springs were in fected. "The present law requires our own springs, to be analyzed and to pay a tax of sixty-four dollars a year. This does not reach the wa ters from springs out of the state and the tax is not fair to large and small springs alike. This bill gradu ates the tax down to fifteen dollars a year and puts outside springs up on exactly the same footing as our own. "I know of nothing more likely to spread typhoid fever than these in fected springs." fought For Silk Stockings, About 1,000 women started a small sized not m the lobbies of the Gar den Theatre in New York last Thurs day night, the cause being a distri bution of silk stockings to every wo man who bought a ticket for the hundredth performance of Mr. Hen ry E. Dixey in Mary Jane s .Fa. Mr; Dixey's last words in "Mary Jane's Pa" are There is nothing so much worth fighting for in this world as love." And every woman in the house made the mental addi tion. "and silk stockings," for the curtain had not begun to come down before the whole feminine half of the house was on its way toward the box office. Talk about your bargain sale crushes ! Talk about your weaker sex ! The ushers were swept away like chaff as the crgwd made for the doors. With fire in their eyes and silk stocking on their brain, the women fought it out. As each one reached the box-office and presented her card she shouted out the size she wanted and got a box. Most of them .called for 8's. "My size is 6. but give me o, uiejr cure iui a iiicuu ux uuuc, was a common request. One woman, who had lost hat and coat in the skirmish, begged her husband to take her place in the line. She knew she was going to faint. "Not for a million silk stockings," was the answer.- An Amazing Statement Charlotte News. Dr. H. Q. Alexander, president of the county and state Farmers Union returned last night from Washington where he went to attend a conference of the state presidents and national directors to protest before the agri cultural committee against -epecu 1 a- tion in wheat, corn, cotton and other farm : products. Dr. Alexander stated that he thought the majority of the committee was in favor of their recommendations. "I was astonished," said Dr. Alex ander,, "to hear that ours was the first delegation of farmers to appear before a committee or tne congress of the United States to ask for any thing. No wonder we have never got anything." This is really a remarkable state ment and furnishes food for thought. Says Earth Will Be Smothered. "A "collision of an unknown dark planet with the sun will terminate life on the earth," said Prof . Percival Lowell, " director of the Lowell Observatory at Flag Staff, Ariz,, in a lecture last, week bef orethe stu dents of Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston. - "The event-, will be prophesied f our teen year 8 before the catastrophe occurs," continued the . astronomer, "and chaotic confusion will reign in the world during the days preceding the calamity-" : w JXhe chance of the catastrophe happening, in the near future was declared to be very slight by Prof. ; Lowell, however. VTr --- ; jLocKnart anti-trust law, containing - t , Euo-secuou a, oqu ' passeu uie moai i V fisd bill of Senator Manning. - - - ... --.J The Texas Legislature has before it a Dill for blading proianity over the telephone. If the long-distance of the sweet-voiced telephone girl cannot prevent eruptive language, mere law will be but a vain vexation of spirit. Mr. Bryan does not believe that Congress 'will do anything to the tariff. Why, Willyurf, it will at least blow the dust off , and that's agojoddeal for a Republican Con gress, in these strenuous times. Boston calls Dr. Edward Everett Hale "the chaperon of the Senate." The) Senate needs a chaperon. It "sup do." Senator Knox is the only man who was! ever -practically elected to a Cabinet office by both houses of Con gress, but a century -ago Secretay Gallatin was practically elected by the Senate to remain in the Cabinet. An exhibition of the works of Missouri artists to be held in New York. These Missourians insist upon being shown. Texas is to have a humming-bird banauet. This looks like a direct bid for a Taf t visit. If it takes only $1.80 worth of wool to make a $50 suit of clothe?, it might be a good idea to get out the old looms and return to homespun. No reports come of Mr. Pulitzer being affected with palpitation of the heart. Mr. Delvan Smith says he won't come to Washington to answer that libel charge, so there now. Senator Bailey refuses to resign and Frye says he will stick till he dies. You can't scare a Senator out of bis job. ! Two days ahead of schedule time. The: battleship fleet is a wonder. ! For the time being everybody has forgotten John D. Rockefeller. Mr. Roosevelt was mighty glad to see that fleet of "hisn." Whenever Congress feels tempted to view the growing Treasury deficit with alarm, it can point with pride to the reduction of the next Secre tary of State's salary. A '1A new crack has been discovered in the old Liberty Bell," says the Buffalo Express. Still, the old Con stitution remains many cracks ahead of its nearest competitor. I "The pros are full of fight," says the: San Antonio Express; It would therefore, seem-high time for the cons to get busy. I Little Servia's frantic appeal for a big brother to pummel Austria has fallen on deaf ears. "Inaccferate" seems to lack the usual vigor and directness of Presi dent Roosevelt's message. The "shorter and uglier word" has been laid aside. After they had all had their joke anent the Barringer resolution, e ceritly introduced in the Legislature and providing for the removal of the capitol from Raleigh to Greensboro, Capt. Sam Ashe, of Raleigh, calls at tention to the fact thst the State constitution provides that the seat of government shall be at Raleigh. MM mere was notnmg serious at pre sent, of course, in the talk of remov ing the capitol but it is just as well to know that any change would re quire a constitution amendment, ap proved by a vote of the people. Statesville Landmark. Ujx-jov. uienn nas been misrepre ft a - sented in what he is reported to have said about our mountain people, but hejwill find that it is wisest not to say anything at all about them to Northern audiences. We hope the Governor, who means well, will not beg our friends of the North for a cent, for the price we pay for their contributions is a little too high. They are perfectly willing to help us if we will confess that we are 1 popr ignoramuses, unable to reip ourselves. Charity and Children. The Legislature has killed the proposition to take from the rail roads the right to make purchasers of! mileage books present them, at ticket offices to be pulled, and now the Senate has passed a bill to allow through freight trains to traverse Nprth Carolina on Sunday. The present General Assembly at least shows no disposition to persecute the railroads. Charlotte Chronicle. ja. rs. Eastman says Uarmack never fired. She had no motive except to tel the truth. Those who testify that Cooper, the elder, was going on a peaceful mission and his son fired to save his father only, after . Car mack fired, insuits the intelligence ofl the smallest calibre matir-rNews and Observer. - r U. A. Taylor of iMempnisi presi dent i of the National I Ginners' as sociation, Friday announced his opin ion that thelboll weevil will reach the Atlantic coast in 1914, two years" earlier tian . his former estimate. He predi&s the boll weevill will in vade the cotton fields of the entire state of Arkansas within two years. PARAGRAPHS. PHILOSOPHICAL FACTS. ; The greatest height at which visible . clouds : ever exist does not exceed ten miles. I The violence of the expansion of water when freezing is sufficient to Cleave a globe of copper of such thickness as to require a force of 27, 000 pounds, to produce the same effect. - : During the conversion of ice into water one hundred and forty degrees of heat are absorbed. Water, when converted into steam. increases in bulk eighteen hundred times. In xne second of time- in one beat of the pendulum of a clock light travels wo hundred thousand miles. Were a cannon ball shot toward the sun, and were it to maintain full speed, it would be twenty years in reaching it and yet lighir travels through this space in seven or eight minutes. Strange as it may appear, a ball of a ton weight, and another of the same material of an ounce weight, falling from any height will reach the ground at the sametime. At a depth of forty-five feet under ground, the temperature of the earth is uniform throughout the year. The human ear is so extremely sensitive that it can hear a sound that lasts only- the twenty-four thousandth part of a second. Deaf persons have sometimes conversed together through rods of wood held between their teeth, or held to their throat or breast. sound travels at tne rate or one thousand one hundred and forty-two feet per second about thirteen miles in a minute. So that if we hear a clap of thunder half a minute after the flash, we may calculate that tne discnarge oi electricity is six and a half miles off. Lightning can be seen by reflection at the distance of two hundred miles. Skinning Live Snakes. Very few of the people who are the proud possessors of belts, pocket- books, card cases, and numerous other articles of snake skin, realize the agony that the demand of civil ization for - fads has meant to the original owners of the material from which these articles are made, says the March Popular Mechanics. It is difficult to skin a dead snake, and the skin is often spoiled in the course of the operation, while, on the other hand, it is a simple matter to skin a live snake, and the skin thus gained" is worth much more. Dead snakes bring from 2 to 5 cents, according to their size, and live ones from 25 cents to $1. One of the largest snake skin com- panions nas lactones in Sumatra. When a snake is received from a hunter it is seized adroitly by an op- erator, one hand squeezing the neck and the other holding the tail. It is then attached by the heck to the trunk of a palm tree, an assistant holding it by the tail. With I the point of a knife the operator cuts the skin just below the head and pulling with, all his strength peels it from the writhing reptile in the sam'eway that a woman peels a pair of gloves from her hand. While this is taking place the assistant holds the body as rigid as possible. A series of illus trations vividly portray the process. Limit of Laziness. Two darkies lay sprawled on the levee on a hot day, says Judge, George Washington drew a long sigh and said: "Ah wish Ah had a hun dred watermillions." Dixie's eyes lighted. "Hum! Dat would suttenly be fine! An' ef yo had a hun'ed watermillions, would yo gib me fifty?" "No, Ah wouldn't." 44 Would't yo gib me twenty-five?" "No, Ah wouldn't gib yo' no twenty-five." Dixie gazed witn reproacniui eyes at his close-fisted friends Seems to me you's powahf ul stingy, George Washington," he said; and then con tinued in a heartbroken voice, "Wouldn't yo' gib me one?" "No. Ah wouldn't gib yo' one. Look-a-hyar, nigger! Are yo' so good-fer-nothin' lazy rat yo' can't wish fo' yo' own watermillions?" How Pat Got the Ditch Dug. Pat was digging a ditch. On the first day of the job he dug and dug, but made small progress. He went back next morning only to find that what he had done the day before was entirely wiped out by a cavern. Then a brilliant idea occurred tQPat. Rnlf hiiT-vincr h?a nick nnr shovel in the earth, leaving only the ends! sticking out, he carefully threw his coat and dinner pail over the edge of the cave-in and then hid. In a short while people came along, took in the situation at a glance, jumped at the conclusion that the laborer had been caught in the fall ofthe bank and went to work hastily, trying to un cover his body. Half an hour later three sweating and puzzled men 3tood by the nearly completed ditch and wondered where the buried man was. . Then Pat came out from his retirement and said: "Thank ye, gentlemen. I knowed you'd bite on that." ' An irishman - stood watching an elephant drinking, water one day. Suddenly the animal put his trunk f ul of water all over the Irishman. After looking at the elephant for a moment Pat remarked: . jSure; an' if I knew which end was yer tan, oegaa, i;xi swap yer face." , r -r -: -" .-Ay.: When debts Increase the devil laughs HOW THE SOUTH SECEDED. Uncle Bemua'a Magazine. From the very beginning of the presidential campaign of I860 there seemed to be little or -no doubt but that Lincoln and Hamlin would be elected, and this gave the people all over the South much concern. So much so that the best men of the South at once began to consult as to what measuresshould be adopted in the event that a president and vice president so decidedly opposed in principle to the vital interest of the South should assume charge of the affairs of state. The election took place November 6,1860. As was expected, Lincoln and Hamlin were elected by a large majority. In seventeen of the free States Maine, New Hampshire,' Massachu setts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Califor nia, and Oregon all the Lincoln electors wer chosen. In one- of the free States (New Jersey) the choice resulted in four electors for Lincoln, and three for Douglass. Tno on at tho nann a oa ornmaaaH m this popular vote was m due time carried into execution. As the law prescribes, the presidential electors br y w.w met in their several states on the 5th of December, and cast their official votes. And on the 15th of Feb ruary, 1861, the congress of the United States, in joint session, made the official count, and declared that Abraham Lincoln, having recieved a majority of the votes of presidential electors, was duly elected president of the United States for four years, beginning March 4, 1861. On the 5th of October, Governor Gist, of South Carolina, wrote a confidential letter which he dis patched by a secret agent to his col- leagues, the several governors of the cotton states, whom the - bearer, General S. R. Gist, visited in turn during that month of October. Governor Gist wrote that, in view of the almnst certain election of Lin coln, it became important to have a full and free interchange of opinion between the Southern states, that concert of action might be obtained. It was the desire of South Carolina that some other state should take the lead. Answers were received from Gov ernor Ellis, of North Carolina; Gov ernor Moore, of Alabama; Governor Pettus, of Mississippi; Governor Moore, of Louisana; Governor Brown, of Georgia, and Governor Perry, of Florida. Nearly all ex pressed, without equivocation, the opinion thatrtheir state would join South Carolina in any move look ing to the vindication and maintain ance of the rights, interests, honor and safety of the South." Consequently upon the election of Lincoln and Hamlin, South Carolina, in convention assembled, on the 20th day of December, passed the ordi n?nce of secession. Mississippi was the next to follow; she seceded Jan uary 9, 1861, and Alabama and Flor ida on the 11th of the same month. Georgia followed in fourteen days hour tnereaiter. up to tne last there were serious doubts as to what would be the final step taken by Georgia, as a very respectable min ority led by such good men as Hill, Stephens, Johnson and others kept her fate in balance to the very last nour. Exterminating Rats in Japan. Realizing that the bubonic plague s a disease of rats, carried by them into the homes of man with fright fully fatal results, the Japanese gov ernment is waging an extraordinary war against them with wonderful success. Not only has a price been set on the head of every" rat, but every per- son wno brings in a rat receives a numbered ticket which might entitle the holder to a large prize in a spe- ciaHettery, and rat poison fa beG JL oil X w rn supplied free to all -who apply. Dur ing the periods of house-cleaning, superintended by the sanitary au thorities, more than usual precau tions are taken to see that not a rat escapes. When a house, shop or warehouse is found to be thickly populated bv the rodents, the place is disinfected, a rat-proof zinc fence being placed around it to cut off their escape. These fences are em bedded in the ground so that the rats cannot dig their way beneath them. In Tokio the government labora tories are kept busy dissecting the dead bodies of the rats, so as to as- T. ccx uiiu juou lxvj w uiauj - r . with the plague and in wnat local ities the most so affected are. The bodies are labeled when brought in. Rats Waste Millions. The world-wide crusade against rats has attracted great attention of latei.- Popular Mechanics for March 3ays: A deputation from the British Incomo rated Society for the De A. struction of Rats, headed sby Sir James Crichton Browne and the Duke of Bedford, is urging the Brit ish board of agriculture to appoint a commission to inquire into the sub-' l iecfc of the destruction caused - to crops by rats, pointed out the The deputation I Vtv rota -twhih amounts, on a moderate computation, to nearly I 7K nm 000 AnTmallv in Great Britain. I This figure was arrived at hf allow-1 rens system for registering land - ti ino -onlv . one rat to every acre of I ties coming along? : This is a matter land:- assuming that i each r rat does damage to the- extent of one-naii a cent per day. There are 40,000,000 acrer6f land in Great Britain." WHAT SOSTiOl; ATITTLE SHOULD : A ?l!ARniEDAN:PEARr A - What sort' of -a married man bear? : title should a This is a Question that ia beinar agi tated in Chicago, State Senator Ectel- son naving been approacnea py a number of unmarried women who complain that they are being imposed upon as ii is impos3iDie irom a , pi&io introduction . of - "mister ' to ten whether they are married men or not. The senator sees the wisdom- ox the idea. An . unmarried woman is "Miss," a married woman "Mrs." If the thing works one way, why not the other? It would protect suscepti - ble unmarried women and at one blow abolish all the married flirts. The Chattanooga Times has the. following to say of the proposed legislation: The average married man will see in tne proposed legislation a most unnecessary waste of time and wind. Since the 'new womanmade I her appearance, the married man's badge is Jiis countenance, to say notnmg or tne odor oi ined onions fried on his apron, and the very apparent, j i t iai . i . i j .1 i i t . piayea in cniiaren wnerever ne may meet them. He has the trade mark of the kitchen eternally displayed. If not the scent of dish-water one can readily discern the lines of care which come of wrestling with the servant problem and confinement in the nursery. Yet there are women who need protection; to this proposition all will agree. Since this is a potent fact, why not pass a law to force married men to wear rings in their noses and ruffles on their pants? By all means, if there be one designing married man who has, by dint of constant use of cold creams and rouges, staved off the wrinkles and the generally depressed appearance, then protect the dear girls from this monster, even n it is necessary to pass a law requiring all married men to go on all-fours when they venture beyond the confines of the kitchen." Only One. During the course of a stump speech delivered in Mississippi some time ago by John Sharp Williams, the Democratic leader of - the House of Representatives, he was interrupt- ed by a yell from a man in tne au dience: "I have been robbed by pickpock ets!" l did not know tnere were any Republicans present," promptly sug gested Mr. Williams, in order to get a laugh. "Oh. there ain't, there ain't!" roared the unhappy man. "I'm the only one!" He Believed in Colds. While waiting for the speaker at a public meeting a pale little man in the audience seemed very nervous. He glanced over his shoulder from time to-time and squirmed and shifted about in his seat. At last, unable to stand it any longer, he W86. demanded, in a high, pen- etrating voice. Is there a Christian Scientist in this room ?" A woman at the other side of the hall got up and said, "I am a Chris tian Scientist." "Well, then, madam," requested the, little man, "would you mind changing seats with me? I'm sit ting in a draft.1 Bryan to Write a Novel. William J. tiryan win become an author, novelist and dramatizer. ac -mm . cording to a dispatch received .from Mission, Texas- Mr. Bryan is erecting a fine resi-1 dence upon his tract of land which he recently purchased near Mission, and he has advised friends there that he expects to retire from lecture i sel to writing a novel and dramatiz- ing the same. He-will do this work at his new home at Mission. 'Possums Bring $10 Each. So great is the demand for 'pos sum in the North and West since the Taf t banquet at Atlanta that the marsupials are bringing $10 each, I irrespective of what they weigh or I how old they are. Dealers are un able to secure half enough to supply the demand. One order was received at Atlanta Friday morning for 250 'possums at $10 each, and that afternoon an or der came from Hartford, Conn., for tnaama rnamma A- 140 'possums. 'Possums could be secured for tu cents eacn. and were retailed for $1, prior to the visit of Mr. Taf t. We have again and again com mended President Venable for the policy he has always pursued . as president of the University. He is in no sense a lobbyist and remains at ChapeH-KUl attending to hit busi ness instead of hanging around Ral eigh advising" the Legislature how it should act. We have always I . - , . . greatly admired Dr. Venable and his i-t j l r i attitude toward all . the other - col leges of the State has removed much ot prejudice in the popular, mind i -1 - a -wt r r m t j j agamsi ine umyersiiy. vnaniy ana - How is the bill inthe Legislature to provide the State with the Tor that should not be - overlooked. There is no politics in It and the Leg islature could afford to approach it boldly.-Charlotte Chronicle. rnnnorn nccnmniarpn inrprrar niibituiviiitr hiiu ULiiizinv pvprv nohnn nf THE REAL PARMER: He Makes Every Move on the. Theory that He is in the forcinc for i;f- A nrtn - . 1 m w ... f the late M. Strauss, used to tell his clerks: "It Hno nnt i I man to sell a plug of tobacco. Any- i uwj wu uu mat. me sale is aJ I reaoy maae in iacfc The cutomer merely cans ior the tobacco and the I salesman only takes the m. nev. I The real salesman ia the man who I can taKe up a useful article about I wmcn tne customer knows nothing. 1 point out its mtrits and it value I ana maxe a sale. There is lota of valuable rood for thought in thi observation, which can be uuolied with equal propriety to vnr.fSn other lines of endeavor. It does not; take a farmer, for instance, to raise ten bushels of corn on fresh. nw ground. Anybody can do that." 1 he real farmer goes in for makintr from forty to sixty bushels of corn on comparatively poor land, and he does not think of stoDninc thpm I After raising the com he goes in for i r 1 a.z l : : I 1 j.i a. . f i vaiue tuat comes witn tne crop, I The corn, fodder, ahiirlra or ofnna. I to hand, he does not want to sell I them as raw materials, if instead he can put them through horses, mules, cows, bogs and pigs, and thus derive still greater value irom them. The a a v real farmer makes every move on the theory that he is in the business - for life, and along with products that are directly exchangable for money values, he looks .out for things that promise value in the fut ure, lne possibilities open to the I farmers any farmer are limited only by his industry, pre severance and capabilities. The Joker. 1 In a New York street car recently a young man attracted the attention ?f :her Passengers by suddenly ieaiiu& iruui uia seat ana piCKing up something from between the slats of the floor. For a moment he ex amined his find. Then he asked. "Did "anybody lose a five-dollar gold piece r - , A ministerial-looking man crot un from his seat at the other end of the car and started toward the young man with outstretched hand. ' Yes," he said, "I dropped a five- dollar gold piece when I got on, but owing to the crush I couldn't find it." Very well," said the young man. gleefully, "Here's a nickel toward it." English Pot and Kettle. One day a learned professor was accosted by a very dirty bootblack with, "Shine your shoes, sir?" The professor was impressed by filthiness of the boy's face. I don t want a shine, my lad," said he "but if you'll- go and wash your face I'll give you a sixpence." A right, sir," was the lad 8 reply as ne went over - to a neign coring fountain and made Jiis ablutions. Returning, he held out his hand for the money. Well, my lad, said the profes- MM 1 sor, you nave earned your sixpence. Here it is." "I dinna want it, auld chap," re turned the boy with a lordly air. "Ye keep it and get yer hair cut." Tried to Whip the School Teacher. Our Home. Mr. B. H. Griffin, who is teaching at Black Jack, in this township, was attacked Thursday hiorning on the school grounds by Mr. R. A. Hamil-: ton, who had become enraged be cause Mr. Griffin whipped his boy. It is stated that while Hamilton pelted the teacher with his fist, Oscar Gaddy, a brother-in-law of Hamilton, and also one of Hamilton's boys, stood nearby with pistols. Mr. Griffin received several scratches but is not HArimifliv hnrt The assa ants are seriously hurt. The assailants are held under bond and a preliminary hearing will be given next Saturday. STATE NEWS. The Department of Agriculture at RAleiffhhas set a3ide $100 to be di- vided into several prizes to be donat- to the bov who raises the most I corn on one acre of ground. The largest man who ever lived in North Carolina was Miles uardin. He was seven feet, six inches high, and in .1845 weighed 871 pounds. He was born in North Carolina m 1893 and died in Tennessee January 23,1857. . Jhe Yadkin Lumber Company has sold 63,000 acres of timber Janus along the Yadkin river m wiiKes county to Pennsylvania capiwira for $900,000. The new owners wm develop the property and extend a railroad from Nortn wiiKesuuru w that place. w.ifaW w WnnHsnn. receiver for the Yadkin "Valley Fair Association, of Salisbury, has announced that the mJAM J WkJ Wk m. J ft) . a rmnnHr hnildinirs. track and other : ' :ii v.. nrnrvirfioa nf fhifl company Will UU soloTat public auction in Salisbury on Monday, April 5tb. It is hoped that the affairs of ' the associaUon artii ha oriinatArl at an early day and that arrangements will be make for yLl L .U: M tnlm nart Tflll. tne iioiuiuK' " -'' , - . . "Say, old man, I have a confession to maker ? Last night, in the dark, I kissed your wife, not -knowing it was she." . , ... ' T MDon't mention it, old "fellow. I once made the same mistake ny self."- ' . , : - 1
The Chronicle (Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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March 10, 1909, edition 1
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