Newspapers / The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, … / March 27, 1931, edition 1 / Page 1
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f HE WHO HAS NOTHING TO f M l *11 ^ LT ? Ai PLAY SAFE?PATRONIZE ADVERTISE I fl >1 Q I*f|| 1*1 I I |J H ,B| Urfll GO THE ADVERSERS : HAS NOTHING TO SELL X IlV *^6KF*XE MJfMjL LCI J^j. I9v IN THE ENTERPRISE VOL TWENTY-ONB FARMVILLB. PITT COUNTY, SOBjfB CAROLINA FRIDAY, MARCH 27tt. 1W1 NUMBER POtTOf-SIX Naming of New Road Body May Wait on Adjournment Six-Cent Gas Tax To Go Into Effect ? New Highway Com mission to Assume Control July 1. Speculation as to whom the Gov ernor will name on the reorganized State Highway Commission has for the past few days given way to pre dictions that the Governor would not name the seven members of his new highway body until after the Legis lature adjourns. However, under the terms of the new highway act, roti fied on March 20, the present High way Commission automatically goes out of office on April 1 and from the chairman through most of the dis trict commissioners its members are winding up their affairs with a view to quitting office on April 1. Several provisions of the act went into effect immediately on ratifica tion, the most important being that which prohibits local road governing bodies from purchasing or selling any road machinery or equipment ex cept the purchase of supplies for the maintenance and repairs of machin ery owned when the act was ratified. Local authorities are also forbidden to sell any oonds or to issue any notes heretofore authorized except for the purpose of completing con tracts entered into prior to March 20, and are likewise forbidden under terms of the act to enter into any contract for road construction pro ject that cannot be completed and paid for prior to Juyl 1. In its final form the act does not provide for the State to reimburse counties for the road machinery, equipment, and supplies which it takes over, as was suggested in the Senate, but merely provides that the Highway Commission shall "duly in ventory and appraise" such property as the State desires to utilize, and permits the counties to sell the bal ance, the funds to be applied to road indebtedness or held as a special fund for road work in the county. On Friday of this week, the pres ent Highway Commission is advertis ing the last letting in the $4,000,00? emergency Federal aid program, and on the following day the board has planned its last meeting here. A week from today the public will be made aware of the at least one provision of the new act which -goes into effect that day?namely, the six cent gasoline tax. The new State Highway Commission will not actu ally assume control of county roads until July 1. I Commits Suicide With Cop's Gun Oscar Shirley of Greene County Fires Bullet Through His Own j Heart After Borrowing Gun From Policeman. Greenville, Mar. 25.?Oscar Shirley 35 years of age, of Greene County, committed suicide on the streets of Greenville this morning by shooting] himself through the heart with a pis tol which he borrowed from a police man in the midst of a conversation. The body was taken to his former home between Farmville and Snow Hill, but funeral arrangements had not been completed this afternoon. It was expected, hpwever, that burial would take place in the family bury ing ground near Farmville. Shirley and Officer McKeel were . engaged in a conservation in the front of the Norfolk and Southern depot on Dickinson avenue when the fatal shot was fired. In the course of the dis cussion, Shirley was said to have re quested the policeman to let him look at his revolver, a 32-20. The officer pulled the gun from his holster and handed it over to Shirley for inspection. After commenting on the gun, Shirley was reported to have stepped back, whirled around, and fired a bullet through his heart. Saying "goodbye, McKeel," fag disi almost instantly. Although officers were unable to advance any motive for the suicide, belief was expressed that Shirley was suffering from despondency and de cided to slay himself. CHEVROLET PRODUCTION IN FEBRUARY WAS 67,318. February production of the Chevro let Motor Company was. 67,318 cars sad trucks, according to W. S. Knud sen, president While the total is 8,448 under that of January whan 70,766 were produced, daily output was higher in February, with its three fewer working days, than in tin previous inoiraL Final figures on Chevrolet's Febru ary production show an increase of 2, 678 over preliminary reports and in dicate that sebedufes originally set for the month were followed. Manch-wchedglcs, according to Pro ident Knudeen, have been placed at 7MdO and confidence is expressed that tot !HBP? os surpassed, uunenx factor employment of Chevrolet ifl DARE COUNTY TO STAGE MAMMOTH CELEBRATION (By Victor Meekins) The 344th anniversary of the Birth of the first white Child in America, will be the center of a mammoth cele bration to be staged in Dare County in August, when that aoanty will de vote an entire week to the entertain ment of more than a thousand sons and daughters who have wandered far afield. Announcement of the second large homecoming for Dare Countv was made this week by D. B. Fearing, Chairman, who states that within the next few weeks, invitations will be mailed to all the former residents of the county. Dare's chief theme of rejoicing at this time will be over the fact that the county is united for the) first [ time in all its history, with the great j state of which it is a political sub division, by the completion of a hardsurfaced highway some 25 miles in length, which connects with some four miles of bridges over navigable waters. While the State highway connecting with Currituck will be [completed sometimes in April, the celebration is postponed to the sum mer when a larger Celebration may take place. With its 85 miles of ocean front-1 age, Carolina's greatest ocean county is the scene for a truly big time summer celebration. Tourists will then find the weather more ideal for camping. From time immemorial Dare has been unto itself, surround ed by water, wrapped in its atmos phere of tragic history and tradition, remote, inaccessible and far from the madding crowd. Nearly a million dollars has been J spent to put Dare County on the I highway map. A bridge and cause way three miles long has been built at Roanoke Island; a three mile bridge has been built across Curri-1 tuck Sound, and the intervening! beach has been connected with a modern highway built by the State. The county seat of Dare is now within five hours journey from I Raleigh, and only two hours from Norfolk. A committee in every community of | Dare County is now busy^with task of compiling a list of ,naSftc3j and addresses of all former residents] of the county, some of whom are scattered all over the world. Dare County's first homecoming: J was held in 1926. The chairman, who so successfully managed it, was Mrs. Renme Griffin Williamson. Hundreds of boats voyaged to Fort Raleigh, and many who wanted to come, could not find passage, and were turned away. At that time there were no roads and bridges, yet I more than 5,000 people attended the ceremonies on August 18th on Old Fort Raleigh, the site of the first ] English settlement in America. The principal address on that oc casion was delivered by Sir Esme Howard, British Ambassador to the United States.. The event was wide ly heralded in- this country and in | England. It is planned to secure a speaker this year, of national im portance, and with the interest that] has grown in this historic section, j it is believed that at least 25,000 people will visit Roanoke Island dur-j ing the month of August There are over four million people living with- ] in a comfortable days motor trip to | Roanoke Island. Farther interest attaches in the fact that the tourists to Dare Coun ty will this year view the construc tion of the memorial to aviation, now being erected on Kill Devil Hill, by the Federal Government, at a cost of a quarter million dollars. This memorial sponsored in Con gress by Lindsay Whrren of the First District, will be on the hill, where the Wright Brothers flew the first airplane in 1903. Now under construction, it will be rapidly taking shape by August. Dare County is further noted from the fact that important experiments in the development of wireless tele graphy took place therein in 1900, and because of several battlefields, and old forts of the Civil War. It is also famed for its Oregon Inlet fishing, now a growing summer busi ness, for sportsmen. Dare in area is the largest-county in the. state, being 85 miles in length, and about 30 miles in breadth. It is composed mostly of a number of widely separated islands, and its area is over half water. Tourists to Dare County are now able to drive directly to Cape JBat teras, the "graveyard of the -Seas," as a ferry is now operating across Oregon Inlet, and this famous place attracts many. A short cut from Columbia, and! even Raleigh, which saves 75 miles of driving between tbe Capital and !. the sea, is provided by two ferries, one of which operate across Alli gator River from Tyrrell County, to ; the Dare County mainland, while ; the othK-r operates across Croatan ; sound, making tdistance | of only ? about miles between Columbia 1SB?^ When the Rocket's Red Gkpv Acted at a Motor and Propeller ] Harry W.Bali, 21-year-old Syracuse IS c-*<Jsity student,- conceived the idea of a sled propelled by'the ' ? explosive force of rockets, He tried it out on One la Lake and it went at a speed of 75 nrftyr an .hour until it hit a snowbank and turned over. ?? ? ? ? , Beo Cozart Dies ?By His Own Hand ? Prominent Wilson Business Man Grieved Over Loss of Son and Over Bad Health. Wilson, March 24.?Ben H. Cozart, prominent local tobacconist and fer tilizer distributor, died in a local hos pital at 4:80 this morning from a self inflicted bullet wound in the head. The shooting occured about 6:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon at his home on West Nash Street Mr. Cozart was found unconscious in his home by a neighbor shortly after the shooting took place and was rushed to a hospital. He never regained, consciousness. There was no one in the house at the time of the act of self-destruc tion, Mrs. Cozart being in Jackson ville, Fla., with friends. She was im mediately notified and left Jackson ville last evening at 9 o'clock and arrived in Wilson this morning at 11 o'clock. Mr. Cozart was born and reared in Oxford, N. C., and was the son of the late B. H. and Frances Rog ers Cozart. Before coming to Wil son, he lived in New York City, where ?!? met and married Miss KatherymGehring. In 1918, Mr. and Mrs. Cozaxt and their son, Httnet? moved to Wilson. Mr. Cozart was connected with the Centre Bride Warehouse and was also district man ager of the American Agricultural Association. He was one of the leading citizens of Wilson, and was prominent in both the civic and sodal life of the dty. He had an unusual capadty for making friends and his popularity ex tended throughout eastern North Car olina. Mr. Cozart had never recovered from the loss of his only son, the late Hubert Cozart, in 1928, and that to gether with poor health is believed to have been the cause of the tragedy. He was 55 years of age and in addi tion to his widow he leaves a brother, U. H. Cozart of Wilson, and two sis ters, Mrs. E. L. Smith of Durham, and Mrs. George Hayes of Baltimore, Md., a half brother, Jeffries Cozart of Abingdon, Va., and two half sisters, Mrs. Frank Morrison of Concord, and i Miss Sadie Cozart of Durham. Funeral services will be held at the home on West Nash street tomorrow afternoon at 8 o'dock and will be con ducted by Rev. T. McM. Grant, pastor of the Methodist Church. Interment will be made in Maplewood cemetery. YOUNG MAN HELD ON CHARGE OF MURDER. Greenville, March 24.?Raymond Stancill, young white man of the Belvoir community, was held in the Pitt county jail today charged with the murder of Henry Abrama, whose body "was found beside the highway about two weeks ago. Five other men, one white and four colored, are also being held in connection with the crime. The arrests followed investigations by sheriff's officers which has con tinued unremittingly since the mur der'was committed. Officers state Stancill would be charged directly with the crime, while the remainder of the group would be held purely as material witnesses. It is alleged that one of the witnesses now being held has made the statement that he saw the dead body of Abrams in the house of Stancill a short while after the murder occurred. ? The 11 lepers who will soon be released from Carville (La.) Lepro sarium, make a total of 89 lepers j restored to health in thelO years the institution?the only one of its kinA in the United States?has been cdn-j ducted by the Federal Health Set-' vice. ?? ? > After Joseph Stolerz, a crazed Lawrence, Mass., man, had thrown boiling water on his 19-year-old son and inflicted nine wounds on his wife with a hatchet, Stolen plunged thru a second-story window to the pave ment where he waa captured by the poiie*:\ ,v,J- -?#!-. r f " ? ? ' ? ;? \ \ i. ? ? '? - v ? 1 ?'? ' i Social (Service Conference To Melt April 7,8 Goldsboro to Be Host?PPresi dent Hngk MacRae Announces Important PrPogram. The North Carolina Conference for Social Service will hold its nineteenth annual meeting in Goldsboro April 7th and 8th, according to an announce ment by President Hugh MacRae, of Wilmington, Aid Miss Gertrude Weil, of Goldsbonhlsecretary. The prografl will feature the inter relation of agriculture and other phases of economic and social life, in cluding stanArda of liying, unploy ment, and Industry, T? I i itlln ?r<tVi rto Hnnfflronffp. ill WUJUUVVapi TTIVU V*4V meetings of Belated groups will be held.. Thetewclude: Association of Superintended of Puplic Welfare; Society for & Abolition of Capital Punishment; Ko-1h Caaolina Associa tion of Travdfe-a' Aid Societies; Fam ily Welfare modetiea; Red Cross Workers; Pufec-? Welfare Depart ments of fhe^WOmarf's Clubs; Social Service Committees of the Churches; Young MeatfuChristian Associations; Yon^Sflj Kb Christian Associa MM?P9R9^oUeffe-StudeAt Croup. Among tile speakers will be men and women prominent in their fields t of work. They will include Governor Gardner; Mr. David R. Coker, out standing agriculturist of South Caro lina; President Frank P. Graham; Josephus Daniels, editor News and Observer; A. J. Maxwell, head of the department of revenue, and others of importance. Groupe meetings will be held Tues day morning beginning at ten o'clock, followed by a luncheon at one. At this time, W. C. Jackson, vice-presi dent of N. C. C. W., will give a legis lative review. The afternoon session will feature unemployment, the prob lem being presented from the view point of the responsibility of agricul ture by Dr. G. W. Foster, State Col lege; of industry, by Dr. G. T. Schwenning, University of North Carolina; and of the News and Obser ver. Dr. Graham will speak at 8:00 o'clock in the evening, with the pro gram also including the presidential address by Mr. Hugh MacRae, and an address by Dr. Carl C. Taylor, dean of State College graduate school. The annual library breakfast will be held Wednesday morning at 8:00 o'clock. The morning program will center about the topic: "A Balanc ed Agricultural and the Productive Means to Achieve It." The same topic from the viewpoint of organiza tion will be the subject for the luncheon Wednesday. A business meeting will be held in the afternoon Addresses by Mr. Coker and Gover nor Gardner are scheduled for 'the evening session. Brooks Issues 'S. 9. S.' Can \ Smithfield Man Says "Lobby Ridden" Legislature Is Laugh stock of Country. Smithfield, March 24.?Under the glaring heading, MS. 0. S. Call!" the Smithfield Herald today carries as its most concpicuous front page ar ticle an appeal signed by one of the leading citizens of Johnston county, urging every land owner in Johnston county to write the two Senators and the two Representatives of the coun ty in the Legislature, reiterating the recent Democratic campaign slogan, "Tax reduction, relief of the over burdened real estate, and placing a reasonable tax on foreign stocks, power companies, manufactured pro ducts and luxuries," The statement declares: "This lobby-ridden and driven Legislature is the laughingstock of the entire nation. To observe how the committees take orders from paid lobbists and do or refrain from doing, as they may direct, is sick ening and disgusting. * The Gover nor and the would-be governors had better get their-ears to the ground and hear the rumblings back home, and govern themselves accordingly, rlsa Mt" will Wsfilr Inner in ffffln " - "" ? S Al ll - ' iina Bftouia me jjegisjarpr 11^111 without giving substantial^ belief to the over-tax-burdened land owners. I think it is dangerous to engage in idle conversation or writing about what might happen in the event the Legislature fails to give sub stantial relief from taxation or real estate, for the people of. the State are worried and disgusted at the fiasco being pulled off at Raleigh, and are only waiting for a leader? they are at white heat and ready for anything. God only knows what might happen should the mob spirit override the judgment of the people and they march on Raleigh to demand lelief a4, the point of bayonet and shotguns. I am not a Radical (Re publican) nor a' Red (Communist) but a Democrat of the old school, but am really alarmed as I read tl*? papers and note what the Legislature is, or is not doing, and as I hear the comment on the street corners. The Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, the Speaker of the House and the leaders of the Senate and House, as well as the United States Senators and Representatives in Congress should become alarmed at the present status of affairs, and' should thorw themseives wholehartedly into the fray and save the Democratic party and the State, for it will be too late after the Legislature adjourns with out giving the expected relief from real estate taxation." Four potatoes, each measuring 9 inches in length, were exhibited re cently by a Burley (Idaho) farmer. O . ' . ... Voice Astonishment at Position of Governor ? Denunciation and Exposure of > Pernicious Lobby: Infesting Capitol Demanded. Fayetteville, March 24.?"If our senators and representatives do not represent us, they are traitors to the state of North Carolina and we shoqfyl demand that they represent us," aaijl Mrs. 4Marshall Williams, of Duplin county, a gray haired mother of jjk; World War Veteran^ as she looked in to the faces of more than three thou sand farm and home owners assem bled in a great mass meeting here this afternoon. Mrs. Williams was one of seven outstanding mien, and women who addressed the mass meet* ing which has seldom, if ever, been equalled in this part of the state for seething interest, intense feeling lop settled purpose. v This settled purpose is to see thqf taxes on farms and homes are re duced in North Carolina. And any man who saw andheari the wtp*j| which these owners of farms ao$. homes went about that business would be easily convinced that this purpose will be carried out, or somebody will know the reason why. They came from 17 counties of Eastern and Central Carolina, these taxpayers. They came to state the faith that is in them, the "faith that North Carolina will and shall "be rub ??d for the benefit of the plain, people. And they stated this faith and the determination to make it effective in unmistakable terms. Officers rescmed three unclothed women from a cage on a farm near Oppelin, Polish Silesia, where they said their father had kept them im prisoned for 8 years 'to protect their innocence." The women range in age from 28 to 40 Tears. An electrically operated turn-table has been built flush with the drive way of a narrow street in Paris, to facilitate the turning around of auto mobiles. The plan speeds traffic and prevents congestion of vehicle* \ ' *'i.' e.t-.pY ;v v Jim Hinson Dies From Injuries Caused By Stepping Out Car. Jim Hinson, 66 years of age, died Tuesday morning at 2:80 as the re sult of an aeddent, which occurred when he stepped from a moving car Monday evening about ? o'clock. Mr. Hinson, a white tenant farmer on the Ben Lewis farm near here, jumped on Hie running board of a car driven by Ben Lang, to ride a short distance to his home on the Farmville-Wilson highway, and step ped from the car before it was brought to a standstill, to recover his hat which had blown off. He was rushed to the Greenville hospital where an examination showed the skull cracked to three places. Mr. Hinson leaves a wife andi three children, Lydia, Ed Lee and Ar chie Hinson; three sisters, Mrs. Rob ert Allen, Mrs. Tom Tugwell and Mrs. George Baker, of this section; four brothers,' Drew, of Phoebus, Va., Ben, of Roanoke, Va., Bob, of Parm ville and Jesse Hinson, of Fountain. Funeral services were held on Wed nesday afternoon at the home and interment was made in the Smith bu rial ground near Bell Arthur. THE RIGHT OF THE LITTLE MAN TO LIVE. I have stated more than once that the biggest issue in Ameri ca today is the right of the little man to Hve^?Governor Gard ner, March 16. The right of the little man to live is not ? figment of the ima gination. .It is a fundamental is sue In North' Carolina.?Gover nor Gardner, March 24. Judged by the report of the Tax Commission and the Governor's speech yesterday, "the right of the little man to live" is not denied if he can survive the taking of his crops at below the cost of cultivation; if he can eke out .subsistence from the crumbs that fall from the rich man's table while the power companies, the tobacco companies, the picture show companies and the other modern des cendants of Dives live in luxury, ex em# from just taxtion; if he can keep lifs la Ms budy whlle Ms pnofr erty Is add for exorbitant taxes and the schools to which his children are entitled are in jeopardy; and if no single measure of real relief is to come from this legislature?if the "little man" can keep breath in his body under such circus tan cea, his "right to live" is not taken from him. But Equality and Uniformity are de nied him. The Governor's doctrine is "not a figment of the imagination," but it finds no expression in "shifting the burdens from his back to those more able to bear them, the only way this legislature can help him. The "little man" should have more than "a right to live." He should en joy some of the advantages of modern improvements and not be doomed to mere existence. As long as giant corporations get the cream, the "lit tle man" gets only the skim milk and little of that.?News and Observer, March 25. TOBACCO COMPANY ISSUES STATEMENT. Wineton-Salem, N. C., Mar. 21st? The appearance of- * number of fake telegrams falsely notifying indivi duals in various sections of the coun try that they have been awarded one of the prizes offered by R. J. Rey nolds Tobacco Company in the Camel cigarette contest, led officers of the company to issue this statement to day. ' "We have learned through unmer ous letters, telegrams and newspaper articles that practical jokers in some sections of the country are sending telegrams purporting to come from us notifying individuals that they have won a prize in our $50,000 Camel Cigarette contest," the statement said. "We regret the appearance of these hoaxes and wish to assure contest ants and the public generally that NO prize selections have yet been made. In fact it will be several weeks be fore the Judges and their staff can possibly make selections. -"Approximately a million answers were received in the contest. Obvi ously a fair reading of so many let ters requires a considerable period of time. Every letter is being given a careful reading. Those with special merit must be studied. "We want to thank all who* entered the contest and to ask them to be pa tient Several more weeks must elapse before the judges can render a decicion. The names of all win ners will be included in our formal announcements juse as quickly as the letters can be examined and selec tions determined." NECESSARY PRELIMINARY v - ' J ' - W .* - "So Edith has caught that young fellow who rescued her while skating. He seems awful shy." "Ynt iha had to bmk the kt." ? Capital City Votes for New Memorial Auditorium Bond Issue of $250,000 Carried by 104 Voftfa Against Regis tration of 5,498. - Raleigh, March 25.?Raleigh will have a new city audi tori am? a mem orial to ita war veteran^?erected on the Centennial School site facing the State Capital from the end of Fayette ville Stfeet, according to the decision of voters expressed yesterday in the $260,000 auditorium bond election. A total of 2,853 votes were cast in favor of authorizing the bond issue, or 104 more than the majority neces sary to carry the bond issue, the vote being taken against a special regis tration of 5,498 names. Interested citizens working on behalf of the bond issue yesterday found apathy an even greater obstacle than active opposi tion to the measure the vote being so light owing to these causes and threat rning weather that grave fears were felt for the success of the election. When an unofficial check of the re turns last night showed a clear ma jority, although slight, there was con siderable rejoicing among thoee de siring the new memorial auditorium. The city board of canvassers will meet at noon today to officially certi fy the vote. On the preferential ballot between the Centennial School site and the site of the auditorium destroyed by fire last October, the Centennial was chosen by a vote of more than three to one, 2,549 votes being cast for this site as compared with 815 for the site of the old auditorium. An auditorium building commission set up in a law enacted by the pres ent Legislature will have charge of the construction of the new audi torium which will stand at the foot of Fayetteville Street on an historic site once occupied by the Governor's Mansion. When the Mansion was moved to its present location on Blount Street, the City of Raleigh purchased the site for its first brick school building which housed the first public graded school. As decades passed; however, and the center of ward and away from this section, at tendance at the school dwindled until the school board decided that after this year it would no longer be economically profitable to operate the school. Students there can be cared for In other nearby public schools at a smaller per capita cost. Frank Page is chairman of the building commission. John A. Park, secretary, and Josephus Daniels the third member. An advisory commis sion includes: Graham H. Andrews, J. Sherwood Upchurch, J. R. Weather spoon, Charles Ruffin, E. B. Crow, H. 0. Lineberger, C. B. Barbee, Leon S. Brassfield, Mrs. W. T. Boat, Mrs. J. W. Bunn, and Mrs. Frank Capps. In addition to the $250,000 from the bond issue authorized yesterday, the commission will have availabel $50,000 insurance form the old audi torium, making a total of $305,000 available. The building will likely be of the same style of architectuae as that of the State Capital which it will face the length of Fayetteville Street. Questions and Answers In The Language of States. "Some time ago you asked in the col'm 'What did Delaware?'" writes a contributor from San Diego, Cal. "Of course, the answer is "She wore her New Jersey," as you'll see be one verse in the enclosed copy of Crazy Quilt State Songs." The verse to which he refers reads as follows: 0 what did Dela-ware, boys, 0 what did Dela-ware? 1 ask you as a personal friend, What did Dela-ware? She wore her^New Jerseys, boys, She wore her New Jerseys, I tell yon now as a personal frienc, Shi yrore her New Jerseys. I tell you now as a personal friend, She wore her New Jerseys. Other questions and answers, in a similar vein, are as follows: 0 what did Tennes-see? She saw what Arkan-saw. 0 why is Pennsyl-vain ? She has a date Georg-ia. 0 what did Ida-ho? She hoed the Mary-land. 0 how did Connecti-cut ? She cut with her New Hamp-shires. 0 what does Io-wa. She weighs a Washing-ton. 0 what did Indi-ana buy? She bought My Old Kentucky Home. 0 where has Ore-gon? He's seeing Okla-home. O how did Wiscon-sin? She stole a New brass-key. 0 what did Missis-sip? She sipped a Minne-sota. 0 what did Michi-gain ? She gained what Ohi-o-ed. 0 when was Chicago, HL ? When Providence, Rhode Island. 0 where is N. Da-kota? She's gone to Se-attle. 0 what did F!ori-do? J fitamo, Al-Mkur.
The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 27, 1931, edition 1
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