Newspapers / The High Point Enterprise … / Aug. 20, 1920, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The High Point Enterprise (High Point, 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
WHY WAIT? Call 2312 If your paper falls to come before 0:30. Special de livery boy at' your service. ,' 1 ' : i M ' f 1 H a . ... .. i 'a "od ,rA 1 l V i ..HI jlniJ ' .1 1MU ia To) ll-(V Mil HIGH POINT'S H6ME PAPER INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS WEATHER rarljr dottdy tonS.t aia .Saturday, , VOL 27-No. 218. Entered aa Second Class, Matter at the Pontofflce at Hlh Point, N. C. HIGH POINT, N. C, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 20, 1 920. H DANGER AM FUR THE NOmlNEESif - N , Independent X'oterg Concerned With ObUgant Candi dates Are Unler. INSTANCES ARE MRU F1IIIE1 IrCHMII i BY BIG L'TED ...... Marked Similarity of Position Cox and Harding Under Discussion. By Marie Sullivan. National Political Correspondent of '. The Enterprise. - WASHINGTON, Aug. 20. Gov. Coi baa begun to talk about Senator Harding's personal relation to a po litical "ring" and to a "Senatorial oligarchy.", The . dlsnatch9s frn-n Marion announce that Senator Hard ing Is going to talk back to Gov. Cox In the same strain.: This Is not the most dignified kind kof argument for Cox to start, and it doesn't exalt the campaign for Hard ing to reply with "You're another!" But since the candidates themselves bare begun H, it is permissible for an outsider to make an examination of both the glass houses from the point of rlew of the public as a whole, and especially from the point of view of the Independent voter. To your correspondent there has always seemed to 'be an odd coinci dence between Senator Harding's re lation to the politicians who backed him at Chicago and Gov. Cox's rela tion to tbe politicians who put him across at San Francisco. In the first place, each of the can didates Is under extraordinary obli gations to a single politician. Gov. Cox is indebted for his nomination to Ed Moore more tban to any other one man. In tbe same way Senator Harding Is indebted to Harry Daugh erty for his nomination more than to any other one man. Gov. Cox, just after bis nomination, made public acknowledgement' of his obligation to Moore" by presenting the latter with a gold watch and Issuing a pub lic statement tb the effect that he Is under, greater obllgaJUOQJt 4JJ$opre than he can ever repay n . , Right there, Qt course, comes the public Interest in this whole matter. Tbe relation Of Cor to Moore and of Harding to Daugherty becomes of public interest only on the assump tion that either of these candidates might, if successful, be embarrassed by a demand tor repayment on the part of the respective politicians, not from Cox personally or from Hard ing personally, but from the presi dent of the United States officially. The people are only Interested In ob ligations which the president of the United States may be called on to pay out of public patronage or oth er forms of public favor. That Is the whole point of Cox and Harding jaw ing at each other along this line. Your correspondent, in comparing the relative desirability of the two candidates, has always felt that Moore and Daugherty check each oth er off, so to speak. Probably both Moore and Daugherty will resent this last sentence violently. Moore un doubtedly thinks he Is better than Daugherty, and Daugherty would be shocked to think he should, be put in the same class as Moore. . Both are extremely able individ uals, and every one who has ever had any ordinary personal relations with them likes them. Each, In his way, Is as big a man as the candidate he has made. It wasn't a case of Harding employing Daugherty to be his manager, nor of -, Cox asking Moore to round things up for him. It was rather a case of a very able politician taking a survey of the sit uation in his party, of picking a man killlne. and of going to it. What Moore is to the Democratic party in Ohio Daugherty is to the Republican party. Each Is the ablest politician, in-an old-fashioned sense, in his party, This description does not need to be restricted -to Ohio. There are few abler politicians any where than these men are. And it Is Just because they are politicians that the Ohio public, outside the cir cles of those who have come to like the two men through personal con tact, are suspicious about the rela tions of each to the presidential can didate that each-has more or less made. r. ' ' The nature of the : Indictments against the two differs somewhat. Of Daugherty, those Ohio folks who i don't like him say he is the sort of politician that is illustrated by one ftnliiodfl in his career. ... . . 1-1. .1 U , This one specinc count wmcu mcj Popular Ball Player, Who Died After Being Hit by Pitched Ball, Is Buried. MAYS HAS BREAKDOWN Man Who Threw Ball Which Killed Chapman Confined to Home With Nervousness. CLEVELAND. Aug. 20. Funerai services woe neid here today foi Rantond Chapman, hortstoii of tht Cleveland American league team who ti ed in New Vrk- Tuesda morn, g following un opoitiilon tor u buried tikull, :'Uiui.d in Moit day's New York-Cleveland game. The ocrvice was held In St John's Roman Catholic cathedral. Thousands of friends and adnilrori of Chapman gathered (o pay thai final tribute to the dead ma;., om A tbe most popular ball player !n the country. D. B Johnson, president of tht InieKcan league, and James Dun, pres. dent, umt tbe en tin Cleveland team, wer at tha ser vices. Three of tbe Cleveland team Including Manager Trli Speaker were among the pall-bjwreis. 14 Paget Todayy FIVE CENTS "Polish Women Help Men Hold Off Reds May si In VroM rated. NEW YORK. Aug. 20. While Ray Chapman, , shortstop of the Cleveland Americans, fatally kljured here last Monday by a ball pitched by Carl Mays, was Mag bailed al Cleveland, Mays was in his home here suffering from a nervous break down. , This was made known here to day when an off'clal ot the New York club rppeared in traffic court for Mays and pleaded guilty to a charge of speeding lost month and paid a fine of $2&. Mays has not played or been been at the Polt grounds since the accident. Influx of Peoples from Foreign Lands Expected to Reach New High Mark Shortly. ins Vic Bryajfet, of Durham, Dishes it Out in Lower House of State Assembly Today. (By MAX ABERNATHY.) V RALEIGH, Aug. 20. The house today asked , the machinery bill on its third reading and the senate passed the constitutional amendment bill on its second reading. On both measures the majority of the repub licans lined up almcst solidly against the democrats. The debate was the most peppery of any yet spilled in either house on any measure except ing the suffrage resolution.. In the house Bryant, of Durham, jumped on the republicans for their opposition to the machinery bill voted for in committee and support ed last year. He told the republi cans they were attempting to make capital of the charge that the farmer had been discriminated against in he revaluation 'act. Answering the argument, ne told the house it pro vided no taxes for state purposes on general property but would leave all of this tax for the cities and coun ties., The resolution offered by Senator Burns to Increase the constitutional limit ot taxation to 18 cents was voted down in the senate as was all other amendments to the bill except those offered by thecommlttee. Sen ntnr Burns believed the 15 cent lim itation would cripple the finances ot the counties but proponents declared there would be more money avall- ahi under revaluation, even it tne llmtt were placed at 15 cents. NO TRAINS DUE TO WASHOUTS Tiu a to washouts caused by : thr avoaonlvA ruins of the Past tew weeks no son'hbound trains hai' passed through the city st the time nf eoins to nrees since No. 31 at 4.50 o'clock th'a morning. . The trouble lies north of Ly-acn-burg and on the Washington dl vtainn. Renorts are coming in from all over the country, and especially from North Carolina, Tennessee and wasnouTR NEW YORK. Auk. 20. At least 25,000 emigrants a week are ex pected bqoiI to begin passing through Btiia-'iaiann .nworjamgUMrrenericK A Wallis, emigration commissioner. today. Steamship companies have re ported, he said, that tbe incoming tide for the next two years will be limited only by the capacity ot the westbound ships. "Italian steamship lines." said the commissioner, "have reported that there are at least 2,000,000 Italian applicants for 'passage to America and the Jewish Sheltering society has made arrangements to receive 1,000 Jews a week. There is also an unprecedented rush ot German appll- ants for passage." TUNNEL TRACKS ARE AGAIN CLEAR adlolninc states of many claim illustrates the whole story. Is caused ., by the recent heavy rains. an tdvantace which -they allege ' Daugherty once took of his relation to Tatt. : Daugherty had, to some de- . gree, the same relation to Tatt that be now has to Harding. Daugherty managed one of .Taft't campaigns in - Ohio. Thereafter Dangherty turned 'up in Washington with a request that Taft should pardon Charles W. Morse, then in the Atlanta peniten tiary for a banking crime. The re quest for Morse's pardon .was put on - the basis that the prisoner was about to die of an assortment if immedi ately fatal diseases., That was eight years ago, and Morse is still alive and brosDerinr abundantly. v& - There was a good deal of talk shout the Morse Vardon at the time But the Ohio feeing about Daugher v. A' l'r- l":'t). RKUEVB IMPENDING STRIKE MINERS IS Orr WASHINGTON, Aug. 20. -John L. Lewis, president , of the unuea Mine Workers of America, tele graphed President Wilson today dan ger of a strike tnis winter Dyson coal miners in the central competlve field was believed to nave oeen averted as a result of the conference of oneratort and miners at Cleve land. VV". viinlx Is Warned.. LONDON. Aug. 20. The fconsU' tory at Rome has dictated to Arch Blishon Daniel J. Mannix, Memourne Aus.. a strong ; evortatlon, urging moderation in his treatment of Brit Ish rolltlpfel queHtiona according to a British official message from Rome t ' r. j 6 if ; .y X A C T 1 0 WARSAW, Aug. 20. Outside the gates of their beloved capital are the women cf Poland battling with the men to hold off the Invader. This photograph, one of the last to leave Warsaw before Trotsky's forces laid siege, shows the Polish Legion of Women," many of who m have seen hard service cn the battlefrbnt. , : i- - , . . .. ; SOLDIERS iVHEN ATIOF POLISH FORCES GRA H A M JUSTinEO COHTIHUES, : REP08T Committee Appointed by Gover nor Eickett to InTeiUgaite, Files Report Today. THE SOLDIERS COMMENDED Conduct All That Was to Be De sired, Says Report Signed by Three Members. NEW CITIZENS TB COME IN BUNCHES ASHEVILLE, Aug. 20. The tracks have been cleared in Log ridge tunnel where last night a Southern passenger train was wreck ed, and the schedule resumed. James H. Wood, district passenger agent. who went to the scene about 20 miles from here, declared that reports that the train was running at an excessive rate could not be. confirmed by him. The wreck was caused by seepage from excessive rains having under mined the track bed. Several train men and passengers were bruised. WINSTON LAWYER HAS MAN PLACED UNDER PEACE . BOND WINSTON-SALEM. Aug. 20. John Wright was ordered placed un der a $1,000 peace bond by Judge Hartman today. The bond requires him. to. live at peace with all men. especially the complaining witness, Attorney Fred M. Parrish. The de fendant gave notice of appeal. He was ordered to jail, until he could get the appeal bond. Witnesses tes tified that Wright had made numer ous threats against Mr. Parrish, the warrant stating that he had inform ed certain persons that he would get Mr. Parrish through the window of his house It no other way. Unfair Methods Cluirjjtil. WASHINGTON. Aug. 20 Th? Southern Manufacturing company .f R chmond, Va., has been cited by the federal trade commission in a complaint which asserts that i h omnanv uses unfair metnoas oi competition in the manufacture nnd sal eot baking powder. The unfali method, tbe complaint sets forth, Is involved In a practice of giv.np salesme nof grocery Jobbers profit sharing coupons to Induce them to push' the. Southern company's pro duct against that of Its competitors. Lloyd George In Switwrland. .. 1 LUCERNE,' Switierland, Aug. 0. David Llloyd George, British, pre mier, has arrived in Lucerne. Child's Voice Arous es Woman , Who Slept 2 Years. WAUKESHA, Wis., Aug. 20. Mrs. Clara Jorgeuson, of Ra cine, who lias been calecp at the county asylum for 'r more than two year's has regained consciousness. A slster-la-law. of . Mrs. .Jor genson's visited the "institutes, bringing her six yar-old 'son. It is, thought ', that ther; phjld: awakenej tb.b memories la :tb woman'rtfAart ;tka(f restored- Hber.to a normal condition. STEEL MARKERS ON THIS HIGHWAY DETROIT, Mich., Aug. '20. Be fore next winter comes enameled steel markers will have been placed at every confusing turn and cross-, roads on the Lincoln highway from New York to San1 Prancisco4making what is said to be the longest high way In the world with Buch guide marks, according to announcement from headquarters of the Lincoln Highway Association here. The road from Omaha to San Francisco already has such markers and work of marking the highway from New Ycrk to Omaha now is in progress. The Lincoln highway- is 3.223 miles long. It passes through Phil adelphia, Pittsburg, Canton, O., Fort Wayne and South Bend, Ind., Clin ton, la., Omaha, Salt Lake City, and Carson City, Nev., among other points. The highway never has been permanently marked between New York and Omaha. CITY WATER PURE ACCORDING REPORT 4 DULL DAY FOR THE CITY COURT Tdday was a dull day indeed for he city court. Only two defendants were before Judge Kirkman. O. C. York, of Winston-Salem, forfeited a cash bond of fifteen dollars for speeding and was fined the costs for violating of a traffic ordinance. Hubert Jordan, of this city, war; fined ten dollars and the costs for speeding. Chemists' Report Shows Water of Highest Purity Being . Used, I'-'V . The city water is purev '. . '.' WvC.' York, superintendent of wu ter and lights, .' has received -- tho tatest,B'BMyr: tr; theitfy Ureter frem the state chemist at 'Raleigh and the . water has befcn pronounuod absolutely pure. There is a standard which watJr can reach In pureness which is the highest aslda from polled water ami it la understood that the city water has now reached this point. Mr. York expresses the Intenllo.i ot keeping the water supplied to the citizens here up to its present stute of pureneBS. ' SAME DESIGNER TO BUILD NEW BOAT MONTREAL. Aug. 20. Charles E. Nicholson, designer of Sir Thomas Lipton's Shamrock IV, has accepted the commission to design the Maple Leaf proposed as Canada's challen ger for America's cup, for A. C. Ross, promoter of the Maple Leaf chal lenge, Mr. Ross announced today. In accenting commission Nichol son was said to have stipulated that the preliminary work of building the yacht should be carried cn In Eng land. He then proposed to complete the construction ot the challenger in Canada. RAL21CH, Aug. fiO. The com mittee aj. pointed to investigate the alleged assault upon the Alamance ,ounty Jail at Graham and into fnc .oi.dua of members of the Durham machine gun compc.iy on the nighi of July 19, which resulted in the .oaU of one man and the lniuriug if two others, today submitted its fpjrt to Governor Bickett Justify ng the action of the soldiers in e urniag the fire when the sentlne't ere fired upon. The report finds: "The deduct of the 0 Ulcere and .he men of the machine gun w pany from the time they reached Grabam and reported for duty until they were relieved on Tueada. morning was In every respect ex emplary and soldierly. The test! iiuuy out sties us noue of the sol diers were under tho Influence ot 1. quor and that there was no un seemly or uugeni.emanly conduct 01 the part ot any of them." James Ray, who was killed nea he jail, and Willis Phillips aiu Clem Bradsbaw, who were wounded were not memberi of any organised mob, the committee reports, n but seem to have been "innocent or cu rious onlookers.", Tbe mach!.ie gunners were or dered to Graham to protect three negro prisoners lodged in Jail Ir. connection with an attack on , 1 prominent white woman of tha place: '. . . .;' ne report to tne governor wai signed by A. H. Boyden, B. S. Roy ter and H. Wi .Wbedbee. ,S ' ELECTRIFY PARIS f SUBWATXINES PARIS, Aug. 20. Electrffrcation of the Paris suburban railroad ser vice, planed in 1910 and lnterruptec oy me war, is necoming a fact tx, the Btate lines and the program 1. expected to be completed in two years . Electric power stations have beet erected at several points and wiret have been strung on a cousiderabh part of the lines but the elecul' locomotives and other equipment u not yet ready. The nearby stations, at first, wil. be terved by the electric trains anu the more d. slant points by tin present steam syitem. The electri tication ig counted upon to rellevi the bad congestion on all suburbia fines. unurr --s y ceess Considered in Paris That French and Polish Co-operation jot , Command 'Hag Reached. PEACE TERMS DANVILLE, VA., NEGROES CHARGED WITH MURDER DANVILLE, Va., Aug. 20. John Qowmaci, a negro , with a record as i gambler, surrendered himself V Chief ot Police BelL yesterday, say ng that his wife had shot horblt Jead while he wps tryii.g to vrest 'rom her grasp u pistol at their lome at Dog Level. None saw th irnroilv ThA .Tipern nnvn tlmt when (is wife arose she went to a bureau Hah cotton combine is now irawer and took out a revolver nnd as handling it whej.ho urged her to put it down. Fearing tbut she was going to shoot him he says he tried to take th epiatol from her and at the moment th'.1 weapon went Off. V -ft,,.--:. -. Inquiry by tho pollco rivaled that the man has not bean on g-od terms with his wI.e.vn'.thoiiRh hn U. nies this. They also found that the bullet through It . womanV head COTTON BUREAU AIDS PRODUCTION RIO DE JANEIRO. Aug. 20. In creased and improved production of cotton, especially in northeastern Brazil, a great potential producing center which Is at present quite un developed, is the object of a cotton service bureau recently established by presidential decree. f The bureau will Investigate the propertied of the soil and climatic conditions, and establish experimen tal stations to study the culture of cotton and preventive measures against pests and plant diseases. Plapters in the cotton sones will be provided with machinery, implements and fertilizers at cost prices, and es tablishments will be installed for prenarlng cotton for market. A representative of the big Eng- in the northern states making a special study of conditions. B. S. MOVEMENT IN MEXICO REVIVING MEXICO CITY, Aug. 20. Tin Boy Scout movement la Mexico i. being revived. A call has been U sued by the leaders of the moveinei. for all lads between 12 and 17 yea., of age to present themselves for tii rollment. The boy Bcouts, or "the corps 0 Mexican explorers," ag they ar called here, formerly enjoyed a num ber of privileges from the govert meat wnlch provided them with un. forniB, bhoes, and even a sma money allowance to pay their ex peuses durlag their excursions. During tbe revolution, the move ment virtually ceated. It is plannci to give it new impulse along 1 lines formerly followed. TALKED i (. Delegatea from Poland and Soviet Russia in Session at , Minsk. ' ' Soviets ', Abandon Pointtu 1 : PARTS, Aug. 20. (By the As- ' ociited Press.) The mllitarv sue. esses of the Poles continued yos- 1 vuulfiS 10 a report 10 tne orelgn office today from the mm. atry mission ii Warsaw under plans elaborated by the French General oveygana and bis 'staff of more than 00 French officers. - j . , . ' It is considered that French and 'olihh cooperation in the commnnd of the various forces now hat reach- 4 a eatistactory stage. - The situatic'a at. uanzig is .'still musing worry but it is expected to k cleared up when two French OjIh .ions now on their way there arrive -tnd confer with Sir Reginald Tow-' ir, the allied high commissioner at Danzig, for sufficient forces to calm ieare and permit the unloading ot Polls hniunltlons. '. :( . : .' ' ,j 'r r ig; - Poles" March On. ' 1 1 ' WARSAW, ' Aug. 20. The .ex treme right wing of the'Foiish army s marchiag on Brest Liiovsk on the Jug river, 120 miles eafst ot : War fw, according ! to unoflicat 1 state- , ttcnls on the lighting; issued ahort .y before last midnight. .The right fflng r has ; captured ' Sielce i and '3iclsk, the statement addftp ' V !;:; -" V'1 K-t : IVact Conference McWa, LONDON, Aug. 20. The ; second dtting ot the . Russo-Polihh :'' pace conf creaCb ".at Minsk took place tn rbursd&y and a summary of Rus iia,'a terms aa communicated to nhe ?olc was rcad; Tbey werey aub ;t.:itiall the taaie v Las. those? he Rttsaiaii-4elefcloa published in uondohi say a Moscow official state--ueht. recciytd ?beso4af v, 4utt)kr46TfrtiNftlie wpfeteure erc agreod upon. Toward the epd f the cession, the Russian delegates rotes .ed against' the Poles'! efforts o drag the negotiations, the atat? newt says.".'" "'. "-',, .-, f -Tbe Russian , soviet forces imvc 'bar.doned Lukow. ,68 miles f south ;ast of Warsaw, and Rsd'-a, 8 miles o the southeast ef the Polish capi- al, according to Thursday's comtuu l'que issued by the. Moscow govern--neut. The communique claims ttutt; he Poles were driven back seveu niles from Ciechanow, 45 miles lorthweot of Warsaw. - ' ; i (linige I'se Dom-Dums. f- BIRMINGHAM, Ala.. Aug. 20, Charges that the bolshevlkl in tho irive on Warsaw are using dum lum bullets and inflicting tortures )ti prisoners are made In letter to B. W. Barrett, editor of the Age Herald from Mlsa L. IL Penny, Ala bama Red Cross curse in Warsaw. The letter, dated Juno 28, stated he Polish would soon fall unless the lefenders hud reinforcements. Des perate hand-to-hand fighting in tbe icmity of Brest-Litovsk was indl :ated, the writer said, by numerous aber wounds on soldiers of bold .miles. , " THREE WASHOUTS DELAYS TRAFFIC LYNCHBURG, Va., Aug. 20 Three washouts on the main line of the Southern railway between Lynchburg and Charlottesville is causing; : a detour of all Southern trains today. A wrecking ,? cram was from temple to temple and thryjwent into a washout 10 miles north ay that, such a wound could not of here and turned over ana . writ nave been made in the way Unwman down an embankment. Two of ibr reconstructs the tragedy, lie is In crew are reported to have been in Jall charged ;wlt! murdor. , jjured.. - , . SUFFRAGISTS TAKE PLAY FROM ANTIS , NASHVILLE,. Aug. 2G8ut- frnge leaders forced adjourn ment of the Tennessee house to- , day .before Speaker tWalker mal any motion to reconsider, rntinmtlon of the fwWal 'suf- fn ) nnunljiicnt. C;ticnts' thn .lost their rlRht to offer a . motion to reconsider which tlie , euffrage forces plan to make mirb a' motion tomorrow and then to tabie itthn making ImpoNHlble any fuKhw parlia mentary turtle to reconslde , the !.(s a-'s orldonl nctloo. I After the f amendment . wan ratified Wednesday' Speaker Walker changed his vote from nay to aye . in order , that he .might be in a position to offer a motion for reconsideration but the fime in which he rouM - make Ills riilon erfro t -y. Kiift'ci- fSciious Lowhcn. BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 20. inprlcan vcsMels in the river Tlatti. trade have suffered serious loxv.. oy being unable to find return ca;' goes in many c-sos because of tin. refusal of port workers to handk wool and hides out of sympatic with btrikeis in the wool and uidet markets, according to shipping men This strike has continued for several mentis and as a result ulmost nt wool and hides are being moved Normally these two hem furnisL many return cargoes for American vessels and the continued strike has put ships to loss oi time and cargo Tho result, according to shipping men. is that a number of ships art being diverted and that ch.trtei prlcou are more or less suitable. FIRST POitlTGlESh LINER ARRIVES AT JLIWKY PIEP NEW YORK, Aug. 20. A fort nightly steanuhlp service betweet thisport, the Azores and Portuga' was inaugurated by the arrival n, the Mormagao, the first pwet.g' steamship operated by the Portu guese government. Appropriate ser' Vices, In which represntativeur. of the etate department aud the secre tary of commerce took part, were held. v- v. M . The ships being opwsted by thi Portuguese, were formerly German ships, seized when tie little repub lic entered tne war. ; ; SYRACUSE, N. Y., Aug. 20. Two men were killed, and 12 hurt when a 2,000 gallon gasolene ror- volr exploded here today. V ' discovered the boilU'8 tit tl - r dnr t!S Of !" ""' T ' Brrst-Litovsk Falls. . ' , WASHINGTON, Aug. 20-Brest-Mtovsk has been occupied by ' c 'olish army, according ; to advices received today by the state depart nent from t'ae American commis :ioner at Berlin. His dispatch wab ased on a report received by bit rom Posen. "Silk Hat 0' Bids Sing Sing ! i Farewell. : OSSINING, N. Y.. Aug. 20. Sport-' ing a carnation in the iapel of his coat and stepping Jauntily down tha steps dressed In a suit of the latest design; and cut, .''Silk Hat Harry" White, the Beau Brummet of 81ng Sing prison, left that Institution re cently after a sojourn of seven years. . White, whose real name Is Wal ter White, entered the prison in tbe same fashion seven years before. At that time, however, , be carried . a cane. The cane somehow disappeared in White's seven years' stay. McGRAW AGREES : TO TESTIFY NEW YORK. Aug. 20. John . I. McOraw, manager cf tbe New York Giants, who has been the central fig ure of investigations here the past two; weeks has gone to Chicago to take charge ot his team.' v;. , This announcement was made to day by his attorney who said ' be had Informed the district attorney's office that McG raw wouM return In 48 hours at any time If wantej Ii connectlcn with tbe h' how John C. Rlavin. v received a frs' tnrp ! ' " the McGraw 1 f. nry as t NEV Ye
The High Point Enterprise (High Point, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 20, 1920, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75