Newspapers / The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, … / June 25, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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r vtt 301X11- VOL. XXII, NO. 34. $1.00 PER YEAR. REIDSVILLE, Ni C. JUNE 25, l0 ISSUED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYE. vf eeiuy Wi ( u V Do You Know What Constitutes a Fine Piano ? Unless you are sure you THOROUGHLY under stand piano mechanism, tone quality, action, etc., you had better place yourself in our hands and get the best. Not for the profit on 5oo pianos would we sell you an in ferior Instrument. WRITE TODY Manufacturer of the Artistic 8tiff, Shaw and Stieff Self-Playing Pianos. Southern Wareroom: 6 West Trade St., Charlotte, N.C C. H. WILMOTH, MANAGER. (Mention this Fa per ) J Need Any Help In our list? You ran have abno late confidence in Ihe high quality f anything yiu buy at our store. Is it a rmrrijdion you want filled? Then be i me id m id it to the 'Dependable Drug Store and have it filled light. We prido ourselves in this department. Phone, write orstLd to us for anything to be had in u firt-t dans drugstore. Fetzer & Tucker The Dependable Druggists SPECIAL NOTICE I have juBt completed arrange ments with the manufacturer of Ttfonuments wtiich enables me to eave to the purchaser all agent's ommisRkn . . Io the future I shall give special Attention to fine granite jobs and shal greatly appreciate tho privi lege of tHlkiug wit t anyone who may need a monument ; C. M. BILLINGS, 'j REIDSVILLE, N. C. II I FOXY GRANDPA and all other men who are foxy about their laundry work, get it done at the STAR LAUNDRY. Don't worry about anything: you send here to be laundered. Every article will be laundered perfectly and returned uninjured. The best and simplest cleansing agents, and the purest , starch, expert workers, make success. STAR LAUNDRY DANVILLE, VA. J. S. HUTCHERSON, Agt.. Reidsville. RAILROAD KINGS HOW THEY VIEW NATIONAL OUTLOOK. Equality, Simplicity, Econ omy and Justice Urged as Watchword. By JAMEi A. EDGERTON. PROSPERITY stands In a general wny for-about all 'men prize lu this world. It mentis wealth, success, plenty to eat, plenty to wear, good houses, mutual respect In a word, the necessities and luxuries :f life. It Is what everybody Is look ing for and some people get. It Is the fetich of the American people. There fore do we greet the prosperity talker as the bearer of glad tidings. Junes J. Hill and Edward II. Har rlman. the two big noises of the rail road world, have been talking prosper ity. President Tnff, George Gould, John V. Gates and others have been talking In the sninO strain. Hill was born In Canada and moved over and annexed the northern part of the United States. ' ; In the magazines be Is called "the empire builder," but In the northwest he Is plain Jim Hill, which tho Swedes pronounco "Ylm Hell." He does not always talk prosperity, which gives all the more value to what he says now. Hill made the principal speech at the opening of the Alaska-Yukon-Paclfic exposition in Seattle. Among other tilings, he said: 'There Is a steady but moderate Im provement In business. The business of me country Is thawing; out from ths great frost which struck It In 17 and which continued In I'M. One of the great things hanging over the country Is the enormous expenditure, not merely federal, but state and munirl p:il. ,'ind the consequent effort to product reenues to meet this expenditure. Econ omy In government should be the watch word. l'er years our people have been like an heir come Into a vast and wealthy estate. We have been wnstlnK and squandering the great Inheritance which Providence provided. The Four Magic Words. Thero are four (Trent words that should be written upon the four cornerstones of very public building In this land with the sacrcdness of a religious rite. These watchwords of the republic are equality, simplicity, economy and Justice. They are Interwoven with every fiber of the national fabric. To forget or deny them will lead to every misfortune and every possibility of destruction that rises now threateningly In the path of our country's greatness. Equality before the law Is an embodied rromlse of the United States. It Is the first prlnclplo sought to be established by the federal constitution. In so far as we have been faithful to It we have not only grown great and prosperous, but have commanded the respect of others because We respected ourselves. In so far as we have denied It, In so far as there Is any where a special privilege or an unequal restriction, any decree of legal govern mental favoritism whatever, we have changed tho government of the fathers and turned backward toward the old, evil tradition whose trail of blood and oppres sion runs through all history. Frequent use of the phrase "our com plex civilization" creates a vague Impres sion that simplicity has been banished necessarily from the modern world by a kind of natural evolution, whereas It re mains now, as always, the normal rule of a wholesome national life. The life of those who di the work of the world, Whether In the high places or the low, Is usually a simple thing. Simplicity In governing methods. In character a".i In conduct must be a fixed quality of ihe state that survives those changes of the centuries In which all oth ers have vanished. Inseparahl- connected with equality and simplicity is economy. Nationally consid ered, it has become almost 'forgotten term. The curtailment of federal expenrcs by one-fourth would assist not only effi ciency In the departments, but reform row postponed by the task of ralsmg and the ragu of spending great sums that should be left In the pockets of the peo ple. Enforce the laws. I,cst and noblest conception of all born from the associated life of mankind la justice. The nation must be true to that abstract and- Impartial Justice which Is the foundation of nobility, the patent of heroes and the final test tH any state. Upon occasion thejawmaklng power has been Invoked not to punish guilt, but to give one man an unfair advantage at the cost of another, to confiscate wholly or In part property honestly earned and fairly used, to distinguish between activities by discriminating laws. The tendency Is by no means universal, but Us presence Is palpable and too dangerous to be Ignored. If hatred, greed or envy Instead ot Jus tice ever becomes a formative power In Eubllc affairs, t.hen,. rtpmatter. wIiq may be the victim, the act Is treason, for no tale ever enjoyed tranquillity or eacaped destruction If it ceased to maintain one equal and Inflexible standard of justice. The greatest service to the nation, to ev ery state and city, today would be the substitution (or a term of years of law enforcement for lawmaking. Get the laws fairly tried, weed out those Improper or Impracticable, curtail the contempt of law that now flourishes under the Ameri can system of nonenforcement and make the people understand that government means exact and unsparing Justice In stead of a complex gams. This is the only safeguard If respect for and confi dence In the governing system Itself are not to be gradually undermined. This Is all reproduced for the reason that it Is good reading, the sort of reading just now needed by the Amer ican people and especially by those In high places. Mr. Ilarrlman's talk was given hur riedly to a collection of reporters Just before he left for Europe. It was re cently stated by a representative of the Harrlman system that this man controls 18.000 miles of railway, or sii times across the continent; that these lines employ 80,000 men; that. In addi tion, Harrlman directs 64,000 miles of steamship lines, making 72,000 miles of transportation In all; that one could go from New York to Hongkong with out ever leaving the Harrlman lines and that he could return by another routo on Harrlman lines nearly all the way. So In the glad conversation that follows please consider that It Is these 72,000 miles of transportation that are doing the talking and not Harrimau himself. Here is what this combina tion of trains, steamships and dollars says with him for a mouthpiece: I think we are on a very substantial basis, and all that it needs to keep us on top of the ive Is for the farmer to con tinue his liberal development and produc tion. The liberal expenditures on the part of the farmers and their agricultural de velopment Is to my mind the Important factor In the national situation. It means the worldwide distribution of wealth In the employment of labor and the pur chase of materials In all lines of life. if we have favorable weather and large crops we shall have correspondingly hap py times. Yiu might say that we shall have probably a great burst of specula tion anil, a rise In prices of everything, and It will graduate down from that to any point, just In proportion as the crops are successful. There should" not be anything today to Interfere with Individual Industry and ca pacity, and money does not have any thing to do with It. It Is only the evt--nce of capacity and of Industry. The next time probably that we have a serious shrinkage In business will be be cause of a change In business. The last shrinkage as on nccount of a scare something that did not happen. The next change will only come about by a more real cnndrtlon. such as a shrinkage of our crops. We need not have h.-d that panic before, and If we are careful we need not have another one. YOKOHAMA'S BIG DAY. Japanese Port Will Celebrate Frfthrth Anniversary at Cost of $250,000. The celebration of the fiftieth anni versary of the opening of the port of Yokohama, In Japan, to foreign com merce will be held on July 1 and 2 of this year. It Is proposed to spend about $250, 000 In entertainments, and the foreign squadrons of the nations represented In the Taclt'ic and the far east will be Invited to the harbor dnrlng the cele bration. The foreign residents gener ally have expressed tbelr desire to co operate In every possible way. Among other things It Is purposed to erect a memorial hall especially eomuiemorit tlve of the opening of the port. CAN A MOOSE GALLOP? Rev. Dr. Long Calls Roosevelt "Nature Faker" on Thi Issue. Rev. Dr. William J. Long of Stam ford, Conn., whom former President Roosevelt once attacked as a "nature faker," said In Pittsburg the other day: - '.Mr. Roosevelt Is neither naturalist tier sportsman. He lived a few nr nths on a ranch and shot game an and the cabin. He says he has seen moose galloping, when every man who knows anything nbout the animal knows that a moose could not possi bly gallop. Its means of locomotion make such a gait Impossible." Airship Traveling Trunk. German Ingenuity has lost no time In devising special equipments for air ship passeiigers. One offering Is an ex tremely light airship traveling (;ti! made of alumiutoim. with i uuuiug leather attachments for fastening to the airship car. The "malle aero," to give It Its International name, has no compartment for the hirge, fashionable feminine hat yet, but It contains, among other things, a small medicine chest filled , with medicaments that may be useful for a sojourn in high altitudes. State Fair Prize For Bey or Girl Judge Because he bad such a sood time at Slast year's fair K. II. Haninian has sent the Vermont state fall- commis sion n check for $100. unsollelturt.to be used as a prize at the fair -to te held at White River Junction In Septem ber for the boy or girl uuder twenty who proves the best Judge of cattle and horses. Emergency Rope Tife For Autos. An emeryehcy rope tire that can be packed In mall compass has been In vented to replace a damaged rubber one for an automobile that has met with a mishap. To relieve eonatinatinn clean nut th bowels, 'one and strengthen the di gestive organs, put them in a natural condition with Hollister's Rocky Moun tain Tea, the most reliable tonic for thirty vear. 35 cents. Tea or Tahlnta. Gardner Drug Co. Mr. A, Rawn, of Graterford Pa., writes: "Since usiug Fairfield's Milk Producer for Cattle Only, one of my cows increased in milk 1 qts a day' This-te-brrt one of-themanytesTlmtr-tiials we are constantly receiving as to the exceptional merits of the Fair field Blood Tonics. Sold under writ ten guarantee by Hutcheraon Bros. CRIME-ITS CURE BODY OF REFORMERS PLAN GREAT WORK American Institute of Crimi nal Law and Criminology Formed in Chicago. The entire "subject of American criminal Jurisprudence and the treat ment of criminals is to come under the close study of experts In the next year lu a way never before attempted In the United States as a result of the national conference ou criminal law and criminology which recently ended its sessions In Chicago. With the unanimously expressed opinion that there are defects almost Joo numerous to catalogue in the crim inal law and In the handling of crim inals In the United States today the experts who were gathered at the conference decided to Investigate through subcommittees the topics which were under discussion for two days. The conference also formed Itself Into a permanent organization. The name of the body Is the American In stitute of Criminal Law and Crim inology. It will hold meetings annual ly hereafter, which will be attended, It Is hoped, by Jurists, lawyers, doc tors, alienists,, clergymen, crlmlnolo gists, prison officials and many others Interested In all that pertains to the criminal problem1 of America. The entire subject of American criminology Is to be brought under the microscope of experts in the ex pectation that- great beuetits will re sult to the public at large. The most advanced nations of Europe, It was declared at the conference, are far In advance of the United States In the handling of criminals and In the ad ministration of criminal law, and It Is the avowed Intention of the new or ganization to place the United States on a par with the other first class powers of the world In matters relat ing to criminology. Over his own objection Dean John H. Wlgmore of the Northwestern Uni versity Law school was elected the first president of the Institute. The three sections of the conference reported to the entire assemblage In the afternoon. Their reports covered In general terms the whole realm of criminal law and criminology, show ing that In the opinion of those mak ing up the reports there are scores of defects In these matters hi the United States today. t' " '" Out of the" great mass of recom mendations submitted to it the confer ence selected the following subjects as those which are to be studied (lur ing the next year by subcommittees, which will report back to the newly formed Institute at Its next annual meeting: The complex factors combining to en courage and establish the persistent of-' fender, particularly with reference to he reditary taint and disability. The Influence attaching to the traffic In drugs and Intoxicants as a widespread ex citant to Instability, in turn provocative of crime. An effective system for recording the physical and moral status and the hered itary and environmental conditions of de linquency. The evils of Imprisonment, particularly those due to the Indiscriminate mingling in Jails and other institutions of persons of different ages and of Varying degrees of delinquency. The results anil most advisable methods of adult probation. The extension and regulation of the pa role system, the Indeterminate sentence, and the- modification and suspension of sentences. Monetary nnd other indemnification of persons acquitted of -criminal charges. The qualifications and training of mem bers of boards of pardon and boards of parole and the correlation of such boards with one another and with the courts. The notorious abuses of expert testi mony and the possibility of establishing commission of specialists, which may be drawn upon for Impartial expert testi mony. Unification of courts. It was declared that the Judicial system should be reor ganized so as to bring about unity and simplicity of organization and do away with the burdensome cost of transcripts, bills of exception and writs of error, al lowing the appellate tribunal to pass upon and uso the same papers and the original evidence Hnd comments used at the trial, and to take further evidence on formal matters or matters not controvertible for the purpose of upholding Judgments. Fair and speedy trials. Impartial but prompt selection of Intel ligent jurors. Appeals anil reversals. Expert testimony and the best method of trying tho Issue of Insanity. The simplification and amendment of pleadlnts. The" subcommittees,' In whose hands the work of considering these subjects has beeu left, will consider the ques tions In detail and will make compre hensive reports next year It is the plan of the institute officials at that time to formulate recommen dations to congress as to changes in the federal laws which may bo neces sary to bring about desired Improve ments, while recommendations will also probably be made to the various state legislatures as to changes In the state laws. In the 'opinion of the ex ports orf criminology who composed the conference, one of the most neces sary things In the United States today Is to bring Into closer uniformity the criminal laws nf the different states, ;: It is the intention of the Institute to establish a Journal of criminology, after the fashion of European Insti tutes of the same character, while the Institute also will gather statistics on American criminals and criminology. It was stated during the conference that the United States is far behind the European nations In statistics of this character. Chicago Record-Herald. - Ex-President Roosevelt advocates the use of modern business methnda on the farm. " This means the regular use of Fairfield's Blood Tonics. A separate preparation for eack kind of animal is the most modem and suc cessful method of increasing; profits. Senator Reid's Funeral. The funeral of the late Reuben David Reid was conducted in Reidsville this morning at 10 o'ciociand the largest crowd that has ever attended a funeral in Rockingham county was present. Long before the appointed hour ,the spacious grounds surrounding the Reid home were.crowded with people neigh bors, friends, clients and close personal friends of the dead lawyer who came to pay their tribute of love and tears to the manly man now clothed with the stillness of death. The floral tributes came from everywhere, among the most beautiftl were noticed the remembrance j of the Spray Civic Association, the Rockingham bar, and the Junior Order of which the deceased was a loved mem-1 ber. Hundreds of friends stood uncovered as the ceremony was conducted by Rev. F. II. Jones, the venerable Raptist min ister, of Reidsville,who has been a warm friend of Mr, Reid's since boyhood. After appropriate songs, prayers and a feeling address by Rev, Mr. Jones, the march to Greenview Cemetery was be gun Following were the pallbearers: James T. Smith and A. J. Whittemore, of Wentworth; Rufus P. Hay, Cabell 1'. Walll and J. Sauford, of Spray; Dr. J. W. Mctihee and Walter Floyd, of Reidsville, and 1$. Frank MeUehee, of Madison. The honorary pall-bearers were the members of the Rockingham bar, every one of whom was present, as follows: Charles O. McMichael, J. T. Pannill, P. W. Glidewed, II. P. Lane, A. J. Burton, I. K. Humphrey, A. W Dunn, James M. Sharp, Jr., J.K.Saint sing, A. D. Ivie and L. X. Ilickerson. The following friends of the deceased acted as flower-bearers.: It. L. Hubbard J. A. Roach, Sr., ex-Sherrill' I'innix, K. M. Redd, S. F. Terry, Thomas S. Mai loy, II. L. Snead, Walter S. Chambers, Bethel Withers, James I?. Minor, J. W. Satterfieid, Robert M. Hancock, K. J, Justice and Samuel Hubbard. Rockingham county is bereft of her most prominent citizen and one of the sad incidents connected with Mr. Reid's death is the fact that his law partner and cousin, H. K.Scott, is traveling in It aly and could not be present. The fu neral arrangements were under the per sonal mangement of his warm friend, Mr. William Young, of Keidswllc. Tho loss the bar, the people and the county has sustained will be keenly felt beach to prevent harm to the sleepers, for one of natures noblemen lias fallen Fourteen are dead and scores prostrated on sleep.-Reidsville Cor. Charlotte trom the heat. Observer. Iu the Senate, Aldrich successfully i pushed through his amendment taking An exemplary citizen, a worthy patri- hides from the free list and making the ot, a militant Democrat and able states- duty 15 per cant. It is proposed to in man has passed away in the death of crease the duty on lumber to $1.50 per Reuben 1). Jlmd, of Wentworth, Rock- 1,000 feet and an amendment to that inghani county. Tho sad intelligence effect will come up later. Senator Bob of his death will carry sorrow to the Taylor, of Tennessee, made a harmoni hearts of many thousands of North Car- ou i speet h avocating a tariff for revenue oltnians, in every section of the State, only. who regarded him as one of the wisest Miss Klsie Siegel. a granddaughter of and strongest legislators of his- genera- General Franz Siegal, a Civil War ,ut tion. I eran, was murdered in New York June The son of a distinguished Carolinian, 9th by a Chinaman named Leon Ling, the late Governor David Reid, he inher- with whom she was in love. It is sup ited the fine qualities of his noble fath- posed that he was jealous. The body er, adding lustre to his illustrious name. 1 of the girl was found Saturday in a As a lawyer, he was safe, most capable trunk in Ling's room, and Ling has and learned, reflecting the greatest cred- disapp ared. The girl was a sett.ement it upon his profession. As a legislator, he achieved such distinction by his splendid leadership in the General As sembly of 1907 as to atrract not only the admiration of the State but the hopes of the masses that he would live to render them even more signal ser vice. The people of North Carolina had no truer or more faithful friend than Mr. Reid. He fought their battles with zeal and valor and his manhood was such that his character could not be assailed and his heart could not be terrified. He kept the faith with the people, and had he lived they would doubtless have rewarded with honors so that he might have seVved a larger number, lor the commonwealth ever delights to engage in her service such men as he, who serve without favor and without foar, and serve him well. In his death the State has lost one of her best sons, one whose life has made it the richer, one whose influence the example will live, though the mortal lias been called hence Ral eigh News and Observer. The Observer has heard with much regret of former State Senator Reuben D. Keid'8 death at homo of his mother in Rockingham county. He was a man of ability and upright character, acquit ting himself well in all the relations of life and leaving behind a memory to be honored. Charlotte Observer. Missionaries to China. Two daughters of Bishop Joseph Blount Cheshire, of the Diocese of North Carolina, have given up their lives to the work of the Episcopal church in the missionary field of China, these yonng ladies being of the Parish of the church of the Good Shepherd. It is expected that these young la dies, Miss Elizabeth T, Cheshire and Miss Annie W. Cheshire, will sail from San Franeisco on the 24th of August. Previous to their departure from Ral eigh there will be a farewell service held in the church of the Good Shepherd, Cottfdi Not Be IVttef. No one hat ever made a salve, oint meat, lotion or balm to, compare with RnMrlin'a Arnica Ss ve. ' Its the ene aeriecilbealer-ot. foitaornaurnaJ li CaoIHo Urtila 1 lmra Eczema, Salt Rheum. For tore Eyes, nru intrr. ouirri itivtwvi a. Cold Sores, Chapped Hands its so pre me. Infallible for PilfcS. Only 25c at W. S, Aliens and mer ft luckers UN A BRIEF FORM ; .- - ;. ' -; , THE NEWS SINCE OUR LAST ISSUE CONDENSED. Sparks Caught Hot From The Wires, Dealing With News Of Various Sections. A princess has been born to the King and Queen of Spain. The North Carolina Press Association is in session at Hendersonvilie this week. The grand council of the Juniors at Detriot changed the ritual of the order so as to have three degrees instead of one. J. G. Witherspoon,ayoung man orig inally from Salisbury, committed suicide Wednesday in St. Louis by drinking carbolic acid. The Wright brothers have been grauted an extension of time of thirty days in wh.ch to complete their official trials for the governmaut. August 3id next is the time for an election in Gaston county to decide if the court house shall remain in Dallas or be moved to Gastonia. A boat containing nine tourists, pre sumably Americans, and four boatmea, was swamped Wednesday on Lower Kiliarney Lake. All the tourists and two of the boatmen were drowned. Contractor William J. Oliver is in Washington to urge the State Depart ment to assist him in collecting an $80, 000 claim against the Cuban government for municpal work done in Havana. Governor Kitchin makes requisition upon the Governor of Ohio for Solomon Shepherd, a pegro under arrest at Co lumbus, Ohio, who has made a confes- sion that he was implicated in the very j brutal murder of Kogineer J. A. Holt, of the Southern Railway at Durham Inut a-intpr Wednesday was the hottest day of the year in New York. The intenso heat forced thousands to sleep in the parks, on benches and roofs. It is estimated tiiat 20,000 people slept on Coney Island sands. Special policemen patrolled the worker among the Chinese. Too Rich to Wed. Onus Sprcckels, son "of Holm D. Ppreckels, who did not marry Adele Case, says, according to a Chicago dls putch. that he is among the "too rich." Said the heir of the sugar millions: 'I shall do as father wishes. He said he'd rather have me be a sugar king tlinn a chorus man. so he told me not to get married. 'There are too classes of unfortu nates In this world who cannot anora to luiirry young. They are those who are either too rich or too poor. I bap- pen to be lii the former class, but might ns well be in the latter. They are equally unfortunate. 'There Is said to be so much In store for me In this life that I am try- ug to begin to choose what I may best enjoy; hence I must obscure niy Mf In the branches of the family tree and tvnlt until I am mature enough to start one of my own. For the other class there Is so little to enjoy that the wise ones say they must save un til they are older. They will enjoy it more. "I have ho much money that I can- hot afford to get married. If I had to get married In order to eat It would le different. But I have too much of life before me. No, I Deter was en gaged to Miss Case and may never b. I met her while we were both staying W ith Frank Klug Clark of Paris. "1 knew her only in a friendly way; simply admired her, that's all. She became entangled In a lawsuit of some kind In Paris and bad to leave sooner than she expected. I was coming home In two weeks anyway, and so 1 offered to come with her and see heY safely on this side of the ocean. "You see, father had heard of nr intended engagement to sing In The Ilacue and Paris, and I guess he thought that I was going to turn chorus girl. Anyway he flashed the C Q D;' said that the sugar business needed me here." Toting Spreckels stopped In Chicago on bis leisurely journey to his heme In Ban Dlepo. Cal. Horse sense"' is the wisdom mani fested by the stock owner that feeds his horsts Fairfield's Blood Tonic and tUga'a pounoed for horses alon tt insures perfect digestion.: pure blood, removes worms and increases vitality. Sold an der a written guarantee by Hatcher- son Bros. MOST ANY OLD COMPANY Looks good in Prosperous times; but when the great Conflagra tions come, destroying mil lions in a night, None but the Best Can stand the Test. i That's my kind,, after studying the business for 21 years. FRANCIS WOMACK, The Insurance I Man The Kind ClotncsRcal Men Wear We have never attempted o fill up our counters with a ot of "freak" suits, and we have never allowed our stock o run behind the REAL styles at any stage of. the game. RESULT: Substantial cloth es for gentlemen, well tailored and made from Pure Woolens, and stylish beyond question. $10.00 To $2r.50 V AN STORY CLOTHING - CO. C. H. ricKNlOHT, Qeneral ilanager. Q'censboro, N. C. DR. J. W. McGEHEE Offlc sane as formerly occupied If -xr:ii... M. M.ntuuk in Rank of Reldl TT MIMIEHW r - ville building. , : . . - 'Phone 60, Residence Phone 6U-1-Ex-Bay and Massage Tnuwt. DR. p. O. JETT; I U4 uivt Office, second floor. Lambeth bfeU'ff. Residence tpposits Epifcopsl ebnrcb, Mrs. uenny s. -. Phone t- ' DRrJrRrMEADOR DENTIST. ', : .-.:.-. GflW ia Cltiaens Fank, Former!? Hex? . bj Rir Of
The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, N.C.)
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June 25, 1909, edition 1
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