Newspapers / The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, … / Feb. 16, 1923, edition 1 / Page 1
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* V • ’ ‘ » » * • • * m THE DUNN VOLUME IX. . ^ DUNN, NORTH CAROLINA, ^BRUAWV 1*, HR ANli-KU L_IX BILL , PASSES THE HOUSE . ON THIRD READING After A Stubborn Fight Sup porters Won By Vote Of i AS to 44 Towngend Of Harnett Led Fight For The Bill . i Milliken Bill Now Coe* to the Senate Where It Will Profa «bly Create Another Bitter Fight—-Produced More In terest Then Any Bill Yet Be fore House—Age of Consent ‘ Bill Also Passes. w— ~ ” i Italci*... Fnli. 14.— Fir.ul pofiAgt of i b i\solut.oMn introduced in iho hooie» by Sfn ikif Djtvjon uiul concurred hi I b> th<- senate, to provide that the! special comm'ttco now chaitrod with! Investigation of the rtate'a financial! condition coalman at its work until j tho auditor* which hn»c b. **n hired) m arc ready to of the! amende) Mill Urn bib to i emulate *p ci*; C order* by the Jidjip on third i rvatiin? CU to *4, a id final «<*nat« ac tion on the houso bib to raise th«* uf rc»onorl in fli« cn« of fc !o 1$ y *r-." f**»tthe Hoy in tile pviir.i l > « »;nbl.'. rnd tonight the Millikan b'll stood leudy for ac tion in the upper home. Debsts Vary kilter Aflnr_ whut members haw termed the bitterest debate in yvsit, the Miiliken bill was passed with an amendment which would make the provisions of the act sppltcablo only to such orcanivut'iiii whose members resorted to mv‘k- »:• other disguise in the r regal a. The main provision1 of the hill would require such orders I to register a rotter of their state and ' lecal memberships with the aulhoria »d stata aotherlties. Hot debate also featured tho serial* fight on the "age of consent law," and it alio failed U> escape amend ments before it finally parsed. The amendments would provide that vio lation -would be termed a —tt— or Instead of a felony as originally ' femtant would be a bar to further prosecution and that all defendants! under 10 years of age would be In tho jurisdiction of the juvenile court. 1 "Clincher" Applied Because of tbs'long .dltingv which 1 the house has held on the secret order legislation, just before adjourn ment Representative Bargwyn of Northampton bounty, one of the leading proponents, moved that the 1 vote by which the bill pa**t-d Its third!" reading be eons,,1,'rod. Representative| Connor, of Wilson, immediately mov ed to table the Burgwyn motion, and tbc motion to table carried unani mously. The vote was taken to finally dispose of the measure as far a* the houee was concerned. Thu Wade statewide game com mission ami control law, which has onee been reported un favorably, was back before a joint session of the house and- senate game committees, and proponents of the mratote were given a hearing. Committee members openly expressed themselves against the provisions of the bill, however, and po'nted to what they called the Impracticability of enforcing the law in all sections of the state when condi uons in..re east var.cn tmm cooai tlons in (he Piedmont end mountain “actions. Millikan BUt Fight The Mi'.lkcn bill to regulate se cret orders currying five amendments, passed the house on its third reading by a record vote of 08 to 44 today after one of the bitterest debates ever heard In the halls of the general as sembly. The amendment the bill carries substituted the Kverstt Amendment of last night exempting order* whose members wore embtoma, and was of fered by Representative Whitaker, of Guilford, which provided that the pro visions of the act should apply only to such orders ts use a mask and gown In their regalia, or othsrvriae disguise their identity. Tbs MU was called up for final reading Immediately following the introduction of new bills and reso lutions and was the only business transacted by the house with the ex ception of the financial investigating committee's import and Die subse quent rvaoTstlon which provided that the committee coniine* is service and report Its findings to the gvnroe report Its (lading* to the govamer and council of state If auditing of the Mate's Hooka eoalrl not be computed by Ike expiration of the M-day period of the general assembly. Attached With Aa.mAue.ta The Ant onslaught en the mekaur* earn* In dm form of a aerie* *{ amendment*. The first was offend by DeateO. of Catawba, which weald CommiMioiier Wade Again Warns People B«w«r* «f Considerate Slock Sc loo men—Your Ckcnooc Am Slim Being s Soooud John D. Raleigh, Feb IJ.—Yog risk noth mg but a little spot cash and the big dividend* erv sure to roll in. Yon B*t a beautifully vngravod or printed cm [ideate that looks good enough to be money itself. Sometimes, tba man telling you Uto stock will considerate ly writ* you another letter after ho lu*« cashed your check or pocketed your cash. But, alas, your dreams of becoming a aecond Rockefeller grad ually, if not suddenly, fade away just us the sun sinks in the weak ••For the ways of the fake etock talesman arc many and hard to un derstand. He packs bis bag, smilss over hia spoils snd leaves overnight, much to the sorrow of those who have ‘fallen’ for his ‘lino.’" This Is what Stacey W. WaUc, in surance commissioner ef North Caro lina. says In commenting on the many complaints received In his oflUc against the operation of "oil sharks'’; in J his state. so *uro arc some of these pro moters that they can’t loac.” salt! Mr. Wade, "according to a recent M-hemc exposed to this office, that they ara attaching to their bonds. «0 ■onjtons. each ratling for a monthly llvidentl of t per cent Twenty-four per cent per yoar, abaolotcly guar anteed I | “For the past month our depart ment mail has been heavy with cona-j plaints from every section of the itate concerning the operations of hesc oil sharks. The department has anrned a number of investors, by etters, of what wo might esall an opi •emic of fake offerings by promoters j "Owing to North Carolina's proa 1 aerity these crooks have been Soek ng to tha state, while others have seen axing other methods to swindle iut citizens. Every invertor should boroughly investigate before invest ng his money." he said. 'AMU is SHO* AND ‘ • 1 MU1 Mhhffi MUM—k| Kinston, Feb. 14.—Cleveland War-' era, 41, was shot and Idllod at lha ioma of Samuel Slocks, a Hugo far-' aaer leaf night. County officials today •aid stocks for the crime and sought i motive. The prisoner denied that le shot Warier*. A number of per -ons on th* premises St th* trine failed to throw light on the shooi ng ---1 -.avs stricken from the measure all reference* to the registration of aames with stats authorities, and be1 man followed by the latest tmend nent by Mr. Whittaksr which was Us er adopted. Beforo the amendments were put Representative Martin, of Washing-' Ion county, aont forward ^substituteI for tbe entire bill and all amendments' (rhich was wordad identically the. ■amt as the amendment offered last light by Representative Bryant, of Durham, making masking for the per petration of a crime a misdemeanor punishable by fins from |£00 to II, 100 or Imprisonment from four nontbs to two years. Representative Burgwyn, of North ampton county, objected to the sub-, ititutc and asked the house to defeat: it. Mr. Deaton com* to the sopport' of tho bid aa oubatitated by Mr. Mar tin. Mr. Whittaker denounced the attempt to eubatitute and laid that “there waa no room In the United State* of America or in North Caro lina for an Invialblc government,” uid h* implored that the Martin aub ititate bo voted down. • Wada Rood* Oath Repreeentativc Wada, of Now Haa »*«r rpunty, who with Hooka of Co umbua, haa boon leading the oppoai tion to the bill from the Brat, aafeed parmiaaion to read what he tanned I the oath of tho Ku Klux Klan, and sited the good which the orgaaiiation kae done in and near Wilmington. tn reply to a queatloa from Town ■and, of Harnett, aa to whether It waa j the Ku Khm Klan who had daaa tho good thlnga and tome one elaa who hod done the evil thlnga oVrgel to tit* klan, Mr Wade mid ha thought the klan did the good thiagj. uml ir me ether hand of rtwakod and hor<l> ikI moo did the evil thing! After aharp croea examination from n«ral proponent! of tho Milli kan meoeure, Mr. Wado road the al leged oath and open Ite completion waa Mibjncted to another broodaida of qooaUofM fro* Mr. Tewnaond ond other reproientativeo. Wado to Qaaottened “How da ywu know that waa the oath of tho klan?" Mr. Townaond nak ed. "Wall. akr. an I aan my U that a I Gate* Raiford Died Of Natural Causes l Ceraner Find* Nothing to Indicate Murdnr ar Foul Flay at Fayetteville I j Fayetteville, pi-b 1t.~Urnt Gatra Kalferil, So, employee of a Fayvtto villr cotton mill, who eras found dead ! in hit home on Barge's lull* after be ing nsiaaeii for four ilayt by hia ac quaintance*. row to hi* death from natural causer ia the opinion made public by Dr It. A. Altgood, county carone.-. The circumstances surround ing the finding of Rni ford's body do not necessitate tha holding of a cor-' oner's Inquest, thinks Dr. .YTlgood, I vrho declarrd Uiut there were no signs of violence on the body or Indication of interna) Injury, nor «n Ihero any evidence of disorder in tha room found where the dead man was found lying on a hcd. Tha house was se curely locked- and the police were compelled tn take out a window sash to gain entrance when neighbors ao tifl.vi thcr.i that P-alfui .1 In J not bsan seen for four days, and ofHt ialt of the Kolt-Winianuon cotton mill, where ha waj employed, dee nrwd that ho i'mi nov oven ai work v.uun tnet time. Ralford irji unmarried, end with one eacrptlon wax the last survtring tncmbei rf V, family, Willie Halford, » IK pi,. «■. being Ilia only living rela tive. Thi family has lived in Fay •ttovlUr sinrt Revolutionary war •laya. An Awful Drop Here In “Bottled In Bond” ?ovtar Drags Hand-Bag Of Trsvsliaf Man And CaaSanta Began Te Oat There was a considerable drop in “bottled m bond" whiskey one day recently, though tbia particular ‘drop* did not affect the price. The drop in question occurred in Donn, whan a porter let go a band-bag belonging 10 a traveling man In that bag tba man to jrhom It beloswwd hqd ataawd when the negro porter allowed the handbag to fall upon the sidewalk, the bottle containing the “medicine” w;u broken and V c contort* escap ed. Thu was. of conn*, a groat lam one that will not aoon be forgotten by the loner .and one that will aot 1 be to easily replaced. Moral: Don’t 1 torn your wal good* over to negro porters. representative fre n Atlanta brought it to me and it a signed with the I (treat seal of the Knights of the K* KJu* Klan,'’ Mr. Wade reptiod. “Then you don't know whether somebody is trying ti> slip something over on this legislature or rot.” Mr. I Townsend queried. 1 “I think some one has tried to < slip something over in thi* Mill,ken I bai,” Wade retorted, “for the legta- I latum of 27 other state* arc trying ' to get through tbo Identical bill." < At that reply Mr. Deaton shoo ted 1 for recognition and whan Mr. Wade ’ yielded, Mr. Deaton naked: “Isn't it a fact that tho Millikan bill is laid at the door of tho Homan ' Catholic church and the Knights of I Columbus?" “I understand that it la," Mr. Wade I answered. Whereupon Hepicaentativa 1 oi-vjji, 01 Durnc, oroxc into tne ac- ' bat* and queried Mr. Wade aa to 1 where hie Information came from. i Mr Wade replied by aayiiy that be 1 “juat heard »»(h wax the came, hot 1 '•that I don’t know about the Catholic church, nor waa I going to bring It ! In." i "At* of Consent" I Refuting a eubetltute hill but u ccpting amendment to the original « meaiuro, the so wile today by a roll call vole of 42 to t parsed on Ha l third mailing the hill which propose* to raise thu ".igu of eonaent" to 16 years. The amendments to the bill provide that a female defendant un der the proposed law would he charged with a "misdemeanor” In stead of a felony, that marriage of the defendants would ho a bar to fur tber prosecution, and that all defend ants unitor 1* years of ags would bo la the joriarffstion of the juvenile Wirt The senate majority registered In favor of the hill does not indicate the nature of debate which proceed ed the roll call, aa that waa rigorous and waa accompanied by efforts Is send the bill bach to committee. Rea sons essigned for the movement to rs-refer were rot fundamental eb jeettens to the proposed legislation hut the contention that thu details of the measure were undesirable aad that the numerous aasandmonta wees cenfusing. Tha hill now goes to fca bona* for eoneunrunou. Tbo town f aihait Lhtir next nfikr i election bo allow f Low* of Dane to >ond leans for tbo. •onm mnnklpeUy, Hils was lumber of local i Dene Ohs ■bar of i •xcniB*. The plans oatllaadl iiVTidm for a I >00, of which «M.< ►y popelar iW ef the town. than JO wople present favored his plan. A committee ihysicians of the T the following 4 c Kay nhd Kn. Wo. K. Gareths ad H. B. M> before the rtiaeieoora et th lay evening e called The ailed to enter iresident of tho lommrree. Moyer leeted • rover f ■ y a be ng proved that the awn an awake to the need of a boo llal In the town, end It ie confidently x pec tod that it will be erected du »g the present year. JODY OF GRISSOM FOUND IN CREEK Jucorurwd By Feneer Sit MiUa From Whorw Hie Am UwxxobOo Wad Fouasd Jacksonville, Feb. 14—The body of I. A. Orlaom, Cmp^ete, N. Cj trnggist, who dieappoarod the night < January It, waa found late today] looting in Tho idee Creek, tig miles rom the piece hie tabaaatgad a*to ooblle waa found tho day aftar ho lieeppoared. Tho body waa Identified m Grissom's by the clothing and a retch and chain. The body Waa discovered by rhoraas Oglhre, a farmer, who was rotng down the creak an a log raft. ! Since HU diaappareaoa, Grisaota baa toon reported as being aeon In vari n vbB I* (fSCBNRTUI* be niyht of January It with Mn. iriwoa, whom ba left ban while b* tarted to Atlanta. She rstarnad t* Ireenaboro by train ud he waa to iaeo wired her from Atlanta. The aaxt day hi* automobile waa ouud in tha creak hot effort* af a mnehinx party to recover tha body, •roved futile althoagh the itraam was Irmyged and dynamited far Mveral dies. CoW Weather Fonc** For Soutbam State* rha Cold Seay, It la Said, WUI Cam tiau* The B**e Of Waafc Waahfngtea, Tab. 14. — Colder *aa*k*r is faraeaat far tomorrow by ha weather bureau la tha amlam und eoatham atataa except la the Florida peninsula, where Already law tr temperature* have baas fait *x eodinff from tha eoM wan of tha east. The Mid map. It waa taid. voald eoattaa* the mat af Urn weak. Generally fair weather la axpeetod Far tha aaxt two day* la the atataa mat af tha Mlasiaalppi river aaaapt tar local mews la tha lower lab* ra rioB and rata la east gulf tadpaalb itlantic me tea fftorai taamlaffa are iiaplaycd oa the Atlaatla eooat from Capa Hatton* northward with ateoaff mat aad aorthwaat wteda and salsa yradlatod north of Nrittdpt. i Man, Ron Down Bjr Woman Drimr, Dud H. Lewis, ml WHahpM, U Held UaAev Bead Par Wilmington, Pab. ;8_William C. ■aftor, M, farmer)y *f Belmont, «i ran down oad mortally injured jmaterday whan Mrs. R H. Lewis of till city, according to bar its tenant, was farced to eweeve her rf|Alm sharply to her left to ora Id a colllt Ion with anothar machine which the alleges was aperdlng through a street intersection. The — — dlgd ' shortly after being taken to the hog pttal. Hie body after being viewed in tho morn lag by a coroner', jury, win be shipped to Behaoat for nWr saent. Mrs. Lewis U hold under MOO bond o» a charge of manalaughtar. WHITE MAN mu »r> ■T ROBESON NECBO Lambcrton, Peb. IS.— Beach Pru die, a negro, abet and instantly kttlsd ■etas Horn, while, at Herr's home aboot seven trifle* north af hers at 7 o’clock this moraine. Two toots ware fired by the negro, both taking tWme*. A quarrel mm forty cent* igssai to have started the trouble. A pome organised shortly after the shooting and csbc within S00 yard* of the negro, who woe trying to ngeapg. and fired several toots at Mm w urn thia afternoon tor fugitive had not beea captureH Tbr murdered man leaves a wife and tin children. An 11-roar-old daughter gad two mas, nia* and ala. respectively, wore the only. eyewH nro*M U the shootisg. The Mgro told kia grandCetkar that He (hot after Mr. Horn had assaulted Him with a trace chain. The wife 0f the warder ed man haa had medical attention since the shooting, aha b*iog in a condition each that she could not withstand the chock of the afalr. Purdlc was arrested In Jachaon Vwamp, soar Lumbcrtoa. late Wed aamlay afternoon end la now in ths Rohooon county jail. rgPWWLMHfSSJS Rocky Mount. Fob. II.—Two ne groes wore kfUad and two others were injured when Atlantic Coast Lina train No. II. ths Coast Line’s through train known as too “Bour glari«s Limited,” struck aa automo bile in which the four nearem wore riding at Halifax yesterday after noon. A negro man, whoae name could not be learned here this morning, eras Instantly killod. whfle Alina Mar row a 11-yooT old ns gram, died of Internal Injuries while being brought to a local hospital. The two injured negroes are a brother and sister of ths dead girt. At a local haeyttal to which they were brought it waa indicated that their Injuries wore not serious and recovery la expos tad. 14,iaa RALES OP EGYPTIAN COTTON BROUGHT TO AMERICA Boston, Feb. IS—The laTgeet car go of Egyptian cotton over brought to tola country by a neocl flying, the American flag arrived here Mon day on too shipping board steamship from Alexandria. It was the eighth cargo of Egyptian eotbon to arrive' at this part this season. The Hog Island brmmrbt 14.Mo‘ bate*, valued at W,8OO,0*O. Not only wore tbo vaaaol’a hold* Mod to thoj bate* combine, bit all bar ateral rooms, the finaa'i forecastle and ovary Inch of available apace on the ship were utilised for cup. MACON POUCZ FOUGHT ■AT1U WITH MIMOU Macon, Ga., Feb. 14.—Denncnberg Deportment Store o4Beiala yaatorday, after what they tensed a “careful h* vaatifattor," declared that the police who entered their aeUMlihmoat Sun day night in scarab af burglar* es gaged la a gen battle between ft era eetvee and their reflections la Ms ■bran la the etere. Oftcials further declared that there were me bursters la the (tore at (he thee. Bullets Shattered several hundred deHart worth A minor* la addition to damaging math wearing apparel. 1 A light was burning la (he rear *f ft* store when the police arrived sad at they entered the eeeessd floor, fac iag a number of ml nun, their ftad owe in the soft daihnaaa peusanaMy bad tho appearance of burfian awe I I year periods aay aetoaelas wether* af hh* State Cartage aad Department of Agrieulter*. Tho posted ie aow bet* ia Merft Ooraitaa aad fto hoadae moot be watehod after. 1 1 — —— Oldest Active Putor j !• North Caroliniai N. G. MS. W SastM, FUl* P» pH Of rwuh I I ! “Winter Haven, Fla., Kab. 7, i Winter Hsvu has Wn lutsita wit! . a brief v'dt from tbs '.driest act hr ! preacher In America." 1. the pene ■ of Sw. H. G. HC1, D. D., of tiv 1 Presbyterian chureh of Marten. K. C i Dr. HUl is nearly ninety-sis yaws « | a«e and has served bis present Aoh ; foty yeas*. He hyt the sendee « an aaiistant paster, but stU dew Diacb of the preaching aad some » the pi-iph work. HI* appearance any yeast a man t*vnty-f,v« years bis Jo “♦or. and his vigor aad rnwnteiity h ts«t uf a man half lit# years. Ufa voire Is dear and Arm aad bis stey ta vigorous and never fatten, and he( powers of physical and mental rn ihsranee are remarkable. His msmery la sue of th* asset marvelous is the land aad bis faculties unimpaired. Dr. HU is pending a dbart thus la Bartow where be preached twice on So/xiay he filled the leeal Prrsbyter ian pulpit at both morning and even in* services, and hvi meesagvg wary vigorous and full of spiritual ferret aad eternyth. Ha preached to packed heu»*s «t both aerviena He ha* been a Christian minister TO years ” ENFORCE LAW BT LAW Biblical RncorUci Dls.cgatd tot law It tbc firm (tap toward anarchy, Sometimes tbc mis carriage ot j as lira is aa frequent and flagrant that area arc tempted to lake the law ia thole own hands aad punish criiaioals whoa the law soeae pswsrl—. Bat a* great a* it ike provocation the ends do not justify the mesas. There is much being said new about the Ku Xlus Han. In this state sad Is other parts of the eou&tey face hare beea beaus aad some pat to death by companies of masked asm whose identity could not be toe rood, aad these lawless arts Kara been cecy naturally laid ta the Ku King. Wo hare reason to ballocs Mint ad that some each tooths d< aa they hace adopted was accessary to p«a kh mm gaflw of immorality. It la ootewerthy that those wbo haca bees poraons wbo wave believed to bo with were, so far as we hare heard, godly of inunormlity or other forms ot lawlessness. We hace good reason* for believing that seme ot tho beat man In our Bute joined the Bias with tbc hope that the order aught bo tho instrument for the Improvement ot social conditions Another object they had If oar in formation is correct, was to stop the aggression of Romanism, especially Uie methods employed by the Knights of Columbus, a secret order, in pro moting the political interests of tho Catholic Church. Those who feared tho aggression of Romanism believed that the beat way to checkmate this soeret Catholic order was to organise a seem order which waa aa much opposed to Catholicism as the Knights of Columbus are ia favor of It. Now. granting that evils which tho Bias seeks to reaaedy exist (and we eeoeeda that thep do), and adm't thig that aefRc of our host cHisent belong to tho sddsr, and that they Joined with the sincere desire to aid in making the order an inatraimml for the suppression of crime - sod immorality (aad wo havo said that we believe Ale to be the cue,) wo ere (till decidedly ef the opinion that (he methods which the Usd adopt* are not justified by conditions, bad a* wo eoncedo theeo conditions te be. One ef the meet serious danger, to democracy is disregard for low. Good eltiaeo should mi an example aa keepers ef the law. If the beet citi zens ef a eowmenity disregard tbs law, what can be expected of thorn who ere Data rally Inclined te be law lesel It ii impossible to create lespeC for law by engaging la lawlees acts Lynch law cannot be Justified on tbs ground that the courts frequently fa. M punish crime. The methods of mas who la disguise take the admlnistrw tie" of Justice la their own hand, are the method* of the mob. Urn methods of the klan am den aerous beeaese bet-head* may jotai and these extreme ehbmeteris wfl go te extremes which are net eador •ed by the coaler-heads aad mere sen tervatirc members ef the order. gne) M enter la always sum to gather h Inflsatiaabls material which can no be controlled. The grielsat danger, perhaps. I that lawless character* whs do no belong to Gw kina will adopt Gw re ' Italia of the klaa far carrying on •mm lanolaaa scheme, knowing tsa their acts sriO be credited •> th Una. Wkrio rfadty soocsdlng that man] Mm '• dam of the Firtt National Bank of >iir»«Mn hid ia tbe baa/boiWHn* TMtcntey. Other oficen of tilh >—»■ pinaident; l. W Dra**hon, yWe president; H. B. Taylor, Thaywai At a media* of the .tfrtkholitom of the hank, pn eedkif that of the too* t*n» was elected: A W, Druughen, J. (. C. CHfford, Marvin Wad*. Jay A. Tbjrlar. John A. McKay, Ellis Gold atrln, N A Tiwaii, Cay K. Grantham, J. M. Sherwood aad H. B. i Taylor. i The report of fencer active vice prveident, J. W. Draughen, shewed the bank ta ba in a aooad aad flMlTbj condition and Mm repart ea vary gratifying tn the atorhhaldary Tha report ahowed dsp salts aa TV—T-|f~r «. I9ti total tag $878,810, at earn pared with $«U^$Pj08 aa DinMsr II, lltli while tha cash in tha book eo DmaWr $1. IMS totalled IlMr 668.00, ae < a* the »«■»# data Mm Ceah'dMdaadr paid to Man m irgaalasd In IS enjoyed a eonttewad oryanisaUee. With " tha* $840,080, it la e*t in ita biatery. The paid In capi tal Is $80,600, wtdls Ota emptes aad an divided profits total MUM. Tha oMeial staff of Mm bank is aaa> filtered sda nf tha strongest ia tha (Kata, and under (ha Issitw Mil|i ad Ur. Townsend. it ia unfldanlli ea portad that Um institution wM con tinue to grow. Washington HfFor mi Washington, Tab. 18. — Prepara tions for the three hundred and Uty thousand visitor* expected ia tbs Na tions' Capital during the Imperial Council Session of the Shrine aoxt Jane go forward rapidly. Plant BPS announced to Bake nf Taaatyhaafe - Avenue, between Fifteenth and Sev enteenth streets, a "Carden at Allah" of btwiUoiing beauty- This streteh of street Is that Invariably given over ta the "Const nf Honor" dvr mg inauguration micbmh*, and la fcUtarte tn having baa Ac am in which ail Ualtad Mata Pmddtnte have ra vie wad the handred* af pm radaa which have paaaad Ac White Heave. Sphlnxe*, pyramid* .and atbr dec oration* aymbolic of Shatnedem are 1o he haiit, althoagh It to "TT*~‘nr-* that the real "Garden of Allah" of the Shrine today to a ehala of hoapi tab for ertppiad chldrea, now being haih throaghoot the United State* hr thl* fraternity. Alexandria. Vt, atx ta&aa from Wa»hington, it cooporaUng with Ao Capital City, aad prapoada to ttoee certain itrwh In order to ntahe Ao porting • pare raoervad far throe han drod * imping cam, Ja the railroad yard* adjacent to that ahy, morn con venient far vtaitor*. RaSroad yard* on both atdoa ef the elty win held a thonmnd or mam Palhaaaa, [a which ft to axpottad a largo naather of rWthm delmr*Uon* will Mho thalr hoaaae daring Ac week’* fcatMttoa. i af Ae heat efttocaa holoag to Ao ’ ktoa aad that they Joined from pnr *P mot hr#* wo atW balloon, far Sm l roaaona gtvan ohova, that Ana la tond to aimrthy. tha aplrlt of nWdk I dogma A ho awoagiag Ao gtoho A ’ thl* Ana.
The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 16, 1923, edition 1
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