Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Dec. 10, 1928, edition 1 / Page 1
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LATE NEWS The Markets. Shelby Cotton Market_ IK'.-c Cotton Seed, per bu. - fit l-2c Fair Tuesday. Today’s North Carolina Weather Report: Fair tonight and Tuesday, j Not quite so cold in north portion tonight. King George No better. I Dispatches from London last night stated that the condition of King George «as still regarded as unfavorable due to the persistency of his fever. WHISKEY HUD 1 Aged >lrs. Dunn Pays Sick Put Cops Search On: Kini Gabon. Mr Elizabeth Dunn, :ir fd white j woman ikijp has featured in several 1 important liquor cases in court J here, is .header) buck for the court j room again ail because city police- j men decided that whiskey Plight be concealed most anywhere, even tn bed with the owner. Saturday night Police Clu i Rich ards with Policeman Raul Stanley j end McBride Poston paid a v.sit to ; the Dunn home in We t She'by They peeped about on the outside j until they were of the opinion tint \ they had seen enough. and then ! they entered the home. Jumped In Bed. Just before they entered Mrs ; Dunn, the officers say was up about the house and apparently carrying in business with the six or .seven visitors who were there. But whin the officers got inside Mrs. Dunn was all covered up in l ed, and ap parently a Blighty sick woman. Some time back she broke her arm end as a result she had a high fev er, she told them. The blueeoat, searched about tjie house and fail-: < d to find any bootleg, except for a pint found on cne of the young men visitors. However, the ..three officers had strong ideas about there being more strong drink about the house. They told Mrs. Dunn they wanted to search the bed. She was too sick, she told them to be moved. The ceps insisted: she refused. Eventual ly one of the officers dashed up town after the county physician The doctor, when lie arrived, took the sick woman's temperature. It wasn't so alarmingly high, and he told the officers that they might go on with their search raid informed ] Mrs. Dunn that in his opinion it wouldn’t hurt her to get up while ] they searched, or go to another bed i Refused To Move. But Mrs. Dunn had ideas of her own. She wasn't goinj to endanger her life just to please a bunch of officers. Yet the officers were just as insistent. When the doctor said it was all right, they went ahead with their search in a somewhat embarrassed and delicate manner. And There It tYa*. Here and there about the feed the fingers of the officers moved At first the search seemed fruitless, but after a bit—there it was; some thing over a gallon, in various re ceptacles, about which, the officers said, the woman had entwined he: limbs. The defendant failed to show up at the early session of county ecu. .. today. Apparently she. is still mi x' elL Basketball Starts On Tuesday Night Cliff side In “Tin f an" Here. Grid Boys Get Their Letters. The basketball season for the Shelby highs officially opens here Tuesday night when the strong Cliffside quint comes to battle Shel by for the opening game. Shelby has only two or three let ter men left over from last year': county championship quint and Coaches Morris and Falls are fur ther handicapped due to the fact that the cage squad has been hard hit by the influenza epidemic. With several of the players cut the squad will not go into the game at the ■ tin can" Tuesday night in the best of shape. The girls leant opened their sea son last week with Kings Mountain, losing the game to the lasses from the east county town, by a 27 to if score. Grid Letters Out. Sixteen Shelby high beys have been awarded the cove’ed letter "S" or a star for their football play this season. The youths receiving the school' monogram for varsity play were: Capt. Milt. Gold, Eugene Black. Halbert Farris. Ralph Gard ner, Doane Hulick. Alvin Hoffman, Rill Lattimore. Gilmore Singleton, Palmer MtjSwaln, Pinkney Richards Edwin Washburn. Alfred Eskridge, Guy Bridges, Zeno Wall. Claude hippy and Hubert Wilson. SHELBY, N. C. 10 PAGES TODAY MONDAY. DEC. 10, 1028. Published Monday, Wednesday , end Friday Afternoons ny mail, per year (tn advance) $2.50 Carrier, per year (in advance) $3 00 ! SHORTAGE OF SEED FEARED BY COUNTY I rge Cleveland Farmers To Protect Seed And Buy From Planting Now. The l!)‘?9 cotton crop in this coun ty and all over the South may be greatly decreased by an apparent .ceil shortage that threatens now. according to a warning just issued ! v the Cleveland County Board of Agriculture to the farmers of this county. The visualized seed short age is due to the wet cotton season this year wh'ch has caused seed to cot In the fields and storage with the result that there Is an alarm ing scarcity of seed now. The warning of the county farm board, which met here Friday night, iak'-v form in two forms of advice o Cleveland county cotton farmers. First.’ farmers who have seed stored are urged to watch their seed care fully and keep them stirred to keep them from heating enough to kill the germination. Second, farmers who intend to purchase their seed for planting purposes are urged to do so and not wait until after Chri tmas. as due to the seed short a"c it may be impossible to pur cha e good seed at that time. Breeders Have Shortage. In the opinion of County Agent Alvin Hardin anc! others, wdio talk ed at the farm board meeting, hun dreds of acres in the South will not be planted nest year due t j the shortage and on hundreds of oth er acres there will be poor results due to the seed weakened by heat ing. These who purchase their -seed tight away or have their own seed should bag them now so as to pre serve them for planting, the sfarm board advises. The county agent says that due to the fact that the season was dry er in Cleveland county than in any other part ot this cotton section the farmers ot this county now have the best seed to be found. The ! large seed breeders, for the most i part, had their seed destroyed dur ing the wet spell and those who count on purchasing their seed from breeders at planting time will meet with disappointment he says. "Those who want Coker's No. 3 or Humco No: 20 should make ar rangements with some one in the county who has good seed for the breeders will have none to sell this year." advised the comity agent. ' Furthermore, the good seed we have now in the county, and we have the best, going, is in danger as nearly every large pile of seed I have examined is heated enough to kill germination." he continued. The farm board judging by the talk of members is greatly worried about the seed shortage and the board is serious in urging county ! farmers to care for the seed they have and make arrangements im mediately for purchasing seed need ed as a delay may mean that the acreage in the county may be cut jdewn considerably next year. Kill Boll Weevil. Another suggestion passed out by the farm board deals with the dead ly enemy of the cotton planter—the boll weevil. According to the farmers there are numerous boil weevils in this county now and this winter is the • time to get rid of them. The farm hoard urges all farmers when they catch up with their ether work to either cut down their cotton stalks or pull a drag harrow across the | fields thus destroying the bolls and j place of hibernation. Education Program. In the spring the agricultural board plans a general educational campaign which will include ferti lizer and seed variety tests in every township in the county with the | work supervised by Agent Hardin, Dr. R. Y. Winters and Mr. Pate. These educational tests will start a be ut the third week in January, it is hoped. Meet In January. The next meeting of the county farm board has been set for Sat urday, January 5, at 2:30 in the aft ernoon in the court house here, and farmers interested in the general development program are invited to attend the meeting, whether they belong to the board or not. Christmas Couples At Marriage Mart December business in the office of the register of deeds here is prom ising. So tar this month five cou ples, three ot them colored, have secured manriage license. The two white couples were: Theron CO'inm^n and K Gibbs hoth of the county; Clyde Peeler, of *■) e r i nty, and Estelle Robinson, o' Vale. County Out For New Cotton Record-45,343 Bales Ginned Ginning To December 1 Passes Mark Of j Last Year. 50,000 Bales Seen. Cleveland county this ; ear seems sure to make 50,000 bales of cotton and establish a new cotton produc tion record in leading the state. Miles H. Ware, ginning agent informed The Star today that prior to December 1, by the ginning re port. 45,343 bales of cotton had been ginned in the county. Up to the same date last year, 1927, only 44,568 bales had been ginned. The lead of 775 bales this year is the first time that this year’s crop has led that of last year. Cotton men predict 50,000 bales, and possibly 51 or 52 thousand after hearing the report. 1'hey base their prediction on the fact that 7,354 bales were ginned in the period from Noverii ber 14 to December 1, and believe that at December 1 there was at least that much more cotton to be ginned. The next report will be compiled i on December 12 and the total gin ning in the county then will not ' fall far short of the 50 000-mark After, the report of December 12 : there will not be another report ! until January 15. | Shelby Grid Captain Named On . j All-Southern, All-State Teams! “Milky’’ Gold Named On All Southern And Two All-State Eleven*. Milt Gold, the big, lanky captain of the Shelby high football eleven, achieved r.cw honors over the week end for Shelby high when he was named on the official All-South ern high football eleven and upon two All-State elevens. In all three mythical picks he was placed at left end. Gold was placed at left end on the first eleven, although according to Byrd he was good enough as a full back to make that berth, but was placed at end because he was the best in the state. No Shelby player was named on the second eleven, but Joe Single - ton, last year All-State guard was given honorable mention Byrd's first and second elevens follow: First Team. Gold -„.r_.... sneroy. L. E. Smith ___ Lexington L, T. Carlton __ Durham L. C. i Underwood _......._Sanford C. Petree ....... .... Greensboro R. G. Creed _.... ..._ Mount Airy R. T. Laslie____ Charlotte R. E. Chackales . ..... Asheville Q B. Martin .. Hamlet L. H. Laney_... . _Charlotte R. H. Stewart _._ ... Mount Airy F. B. Seccnd Team. Duke . Raleigh L. E. May - Wilmington L. T. Lackey_........... Statesville L. G. Utley _...... .1_ Concord C. Robertson _ Wilmington R. G. Nelms ..._ _....... Raleigh R. T. Armfield.. ... Mount Airy R. E. McNeill ____ . ...Raeford Q B. Mills - Statesville L. H. Newton -- . . . Hickory R. H. Smith .. ... .. Raleigh Q. B. On the All-State eleven picked by Eddie Brietz, Charlotte Observer sports editor, Gold was also nam ed at left end. No other Shelby ALL-STATE END ■ oof “Milky” Gold, Shelby high foot ball captain, was named by Luther Byrd, North Carolina university sport writer, as an end on tiis All North Carolina high school eleven. player was placed on the two Brietz elevens or was g: ,en honor able mention. Only four North Carolina play ers, one a grid star at the Oak Ridge prep school, were named on the All-Southern squad toy the All-Southern board at Deland. Florida, of which John"Red" Davis is chairman. They were Phillips (Waynesville) halfback; Petree (Greensboro) guard; Me Dade 'Oak Ridge) tackle; and Gold (Shelby.) end. Early Clary and Proctor, halfback and tackle of Gaffney, were named on the squad. The Brietz All-State eleven fol lows! Forbes. Wilson, right end; May, Wilmington, right tackle; Petree. Greensboro, right guard; Epsey. Hickory. (Capt.), center: Laslie Charlotte, left guard: Cteed, Mt Airy, left tackle; Gold. Shelby, left end; Chackales, Asheville, quarterback; Phillips. Waynesville right half; Fancy. Charlotte, left half; smith.- Raleigh, fullback. Miss Calla Clement of Limestone college was. a week-end visitor, of Miss Adelaide Cabaniss. Scores Registered For School Election Here Last Saturday Registrar Believes That 1,500 And Perhaps More Are Registered. No Vote Opposes j Scores and scores of residents in j the Shelby school district registered at the court house here Saturday, the final day. for the city school election to be held cn' Monday. De cember 17. a week from today. According to Squire T. C, Esk ridge. registrar, at least 1.500 peo ple have registered for the election. This is a record number for a school district election in the county. tto actual count of the registration has been made yet but officials believe that many to have registered The election wTl decide wb •' or net the mvirnim tax levy will be boosted from 30 cents to 40 cents jin the city district. It not mem , bers of the school board say that by another year the school term jwill have to be cut down with the result that the high school may be removed front the accredited list. During the last days of the regis | fruition some controversy arose about the voters who register but j fail to vote The general interpreta~ nen is that those who register and j tail to vote will count as votes J against the measure as a majority ! must vote for it; Some differ with ] that inteip cr tv >.! 1 • a ruling v.'T 1 kely be made p : :r ’ the election, by the county "attorney. Typical Sou‘hern Gentleman, Vet eran Of Civil War and N'bte Countyman Hied Suddenly While Ws son. Dr. Charlie Gold '.£ Rutherfordton was examining hi, heart. W. F. iMin) Gold, one ol the county's neb’est citizens and a typical southern gentleman, passed way suddenly at his home seven mites north cf Shelby, near Zion church in which he was a deacon for thirty years or more. j i Mr. Gold was 92 years old Nov ember 1 of this year and had been | in excellent health for a man of his ; years. Friday he complained of pains ' in his arms and shoulders j and asked for his son who is a physician. His son. Dr. Gold, came ; and was examining his heart when j the faithful heart that had beaten j for 92 years suddenly stopped and j he passed away quietly as he had i lived and as he had expressed a I hr pe he 'would die when his time came. The funeral was conducted Sun- i day at Zion church near which lie j lived and a great crowd of fnertds and relatives gathered to pay a tri bute of respect to his nob'.c Hie 1 he services were conducted by Revs. D. I G. Washburn. D. F. Putnam. Zeno Wall and John W. Suttle and a beautiful floral offering covered his new made mound and that cf his beloved wife who preceded him to the grave seven years ago. All Children Survive. Surviving are all the children born to this union: John Gold who has lived with and cared for his father in his mature years. Laura wife of Tom Cabaniss, Julia, wife of George Cornwell. Ben , Gold. Mrttie wife of O. C' Dixcn, Attor ney Tom Gold of High Point and member of the legislature from Guilford county. Dr. Charlie Gold of Rutherfordtcn. George Gold of .tills ccunty, Minnie, wife of Dr. J. F, Justice of Kernersville, One sis ter. Mrs, Mcggie Patterson of Salt Lake City, Utah also survives. Saves A Life. As a young man Mr. Gold came to Shelby and clerked for a year or two in a store owned by Col. Josh Beam and Major Jenkins. Later he and Lee Eskridge went to Okla [ hema where they lived for two I years. The war between the states ! broke out so desiring to enlist from ' their native state, they, returned to j Cleveland. Mr. Gold volunteered in Capt. Gus Burton's company. Later this company was captained by Plato Durham. Mr. Gold went through the full four years of the conflict and was captured at Point Lookout, Va. When his comrade. Harrison Esk ridge fell wounded. Mr. Gold tied the shattered arm with a suspender and saved his life. The arm of Mr. E kridge was later amputated and he came home to serve many years as a county official. True Southren Gentleman. Mr. Cold was a man of splendid ! habits. He was a thoughtful neigh bor. true friend. even tempered gentleman lie honored truth and justice and was a model in his community I < .chbors never found occasion to find fault with him and. he made it the rule of his life never to say unkind things about Others He . as; a aios. cptimistv man who was the same sincere and staple friend: day in and day out. When his children were growing up, the heme was a gathering place for both old and young. A welcome and a bountiful table was always wait in and everybody enjoyed a visit to this hospitable home. ft^rs. F.^intz Wins Car And $500 Cash Prize Mrs. Charlie Mintz . came home late Saturday ni~ht from Charlotte where she was the winner of two valuable prizes in the subscription campaign conducted by- The Char lotte News. She won a new model Marmon sedan automcbile and $500 cash prize for her efforts in the subscription field ip this territory. The many friends of Mrs. Mintz are congratulating her on . her victory Carol'na Champion Of State Football By defeating Duke university Saturday 14 to 7 in the closing game of the season the University of North Carolina won the “Big Five” tit e for*North Carolina. On the same day Georgia Tech by de feating Georgia while Tennessee was humrn.pt off Florida won the South'-rn grid tit'e. On Friday the Wilmington highs won the state Privilege Taxes For Leg*t’mate Business Decried “While I voted for the prlvi- ■ lege tax as it stands now, I ’m not wholly in accord with he correctness of this tax,” declared Jcl|n F. Schenck, ji„ veteran member of the Shelby city to-rd, in talks recently before the Rotary and Klwanis clubs. “I do not behave in a privi lege tax as now levied against practically every business in town with pflvate business in dividuals exempted by the st.'.te ... To charge a privi lege tax against a firm doing a legitimate business is not fair.” he added. | The Schenck talk on Shel by's city government, dealing with privilege tax and other matters of general interest, is pu' lished in full on an in ! side page. Hill 11 t-tl('rf.'>rdtoi> And Forest City May Senl Delegations To Raleigh. Rutherford county citizens, who feel closely connected- to Governor elect O. Max Gardner because his parents were natives of that coun ty, are planning to join in with to have the special train over the Seaboard start at Rutherfordton for the journey to the Gardner inaugu ration in Raleigh on January 11. Chas. A. Burras and others hand ling the arrangements: here for the special train to the inauguration are of the opinion that the train can be sent on the Rutherfordton to pick up the delegations frem that place and Forest City. The Seaboard will require that 125 persons make the trip but it is thought that, if neces sary, the special may care for num erous other passengers. Meantime it is likely that many Shelby people will go down by automobile. Rutherford Considers. A dispatch from Rutherfordton telling cf a recent meeting of the lihvanis club there says: "The club discussed the advisabil ity of cooperation with Forest City and Shelby clubs in sponsoring an excursion to Raleigh, January 11 to the inauguration of Max Gard ner as governor of North Carolina. Mr. Gardner is a Kiwanian and a former president of the Shelby club, Rutherford county has a claim on, in that his parents were natives of this county and his father represent ed Rutherford county in the general assembly cf North Carolina." Convenient Trip. The journey down to Raleigh for i the inauguration ceremonies by the j special train, if it is secured, should | be both convenient and economical j as passengers may remain on the i berths on the night they go down thus saving hotel fare, and may go to sleep immediately upon leaving Raleigh at midnight after the in auguration on the return home. Those who Wish to make the trip ! on the special should get in touch with Attorney Burr us or with Mr O. M. Mull so that they may deter mine if enough care to go to charter •die special train. Mr. and Mrs. W. Y. Crowder and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Allen spent Sunday in Charlotte. San ford Gantt Killed When Car Turns Over Palmer Hoyle Shot At Casar On Sunday Maurice Smalley Reported To Havt Done She rins. Report Not Verified. Palmer Hoyle, young white man, is in the hospital here with two bullet wounds in Itis left shoulder as the result of a shooting scrape in a cafe at ( afar yesterday evening about dark. Details of the shooting could not be clearly obtained here today. Casar people in town today stated that as they heard it Hoyle and others were in the cafe there when the shooting occurred and the report they gave was that Maurice Smal ley did the shooting. Those giving the report, however, did not witness the shooting themselves and were merely telling what they had heard. The same report had it that some oi the participants were drinking. Will Recover. At the hospital indications were that Hoyle is not critically injured and will likely recover. The wounds were in the shoulder r.bcve the heart and therefore not as serious as if they had been a little lower in the region of the heart. The shooting had not been re ported at the sheriff's office here early today. Christmas Rush On For County Court i Holiday Season Brings Spirited Business For Court Officials. The Christmas rush, is on in full sway for Judge John Mult and Solicitor P. C. Gardner of the county court. Crowded dockets, and long lines of mourners have re placed the monotony of the sum mer and early fall. It's just 15 days until Christmas and the thirsty seem to b? shop ping, even celebrating, early. Saturday night city officers jailed a dozen imbibers with one over to make it 13. and county of ficers brought in their share over the week-end. Practically all of the : many defendants in court today were up for buying, selling, trans porting or disposing of Christmas I spirits. Mr. Geo. B. Hiss, One ,Time Candidate Dies i Mr. Geo. B. Hiss, candidate for : congress on the Republican ticket | in this district, opposing E. Yates i webb in 1907, died in Charlotte ; Saturday. Mr. Hiss was a retired | business man. He was interested in ! texU’e mills for many years, later ! selling lubricants to textile plants. My. Hiss was a native of Baltimore. | --:—•—■ Drug Store Is Moving Into Hotel Building The Shelby business section is gradually returning to its old for rmP'n crowing the ' wo disasters —hotel fire and building crash The Cleveland Drug Store is this week moving back to its hotel lo cation The store in its new loca tion, about where the Shelby build'ng and lean office was in the old hotel, will likely be open for ; business Wednesday.. the hotel | fire the store has be :i located in the corner room of the Miller block. Cep Buys A Pint, Gets Change, Own Money, Is Oat Handcuffs Officer Creel Ware Has Unusual ! Kxpericn I’ri oner Gets Away. Officer Creel Ware, of Kill",* j Mountain, pulled a shrewd {iiiatu ir! I bargain for a pint of whiskey last ; week but he wound up minus 51Q i worth of handcuffs and his pris j oner. . Officer Ware and a Gaston of ficer, Porter Payne, net so well known to Kings Mountain , rum i dealers, visited the place of John Kirk, colored, one night during the I week Ware had a hunch- -and per haps more—that Kirk might be dealing out Christmas spirits, so lie gave Payne, whom Kirk didn't know, two dollars with which to make a purchase. Payne approach ! ed Kirk, get his pint, and 50 cents in change Which is St 50 per short-. I Jusl as the sale was culminated the 'officer reached over and got his man. The handcuffs, or the wrist bracelets, were slipped on Kirk and he was told to slide in the car As he did so I’avne called Ware about making a search for more. Ware turned his head, and Kirk snatched the opportunity when it knocked Out the other side of the car he jumped and' "sold out" down the woods. The officers couldn't compete With him in the dark in his familiar running ground and he got a wav Down the woods some distance they heard him run into a tree and fall. When the officers got there, he was gone, but in the spill Kirk lost the two dollars he received for the pint and other articles. Net result: ytfleer Ware had the pint. 50 cents in change, his own two dollars back, but he was out a good pair of handcuffs Skull Crushed, Gasped Cnee After Being Picked l!p By Dayberry. Sanforcl Gantt, well known Bel wood farmer, was instantly killed Saturday afternoon when his car overturned as he was attempting to pass another car in the road be tween Summey Peeler's and a cot ton gin When he was picked up by Hoy Dayberry, the first men to reach his side, he gasped one time and was dead from a crushed skull ustained when he was thrown from his car, said to be going at a rapid rate of speed. Riding Alone. Mr. Gantt had been to Fallston and was returning home riding alone in his Ford touring car. It is alleged lie attempted to pass an other car on a straight stretch of road when he had to pull to the side on the road and got in soft dirt. In righting his car, a wheel smashed and the car turned a •summersault, throwing Mr. G-*ntt free from the vehicle, but the fall was so severe his head was crushed. The ear remained in the road but skidded some distance. Buried Sunday. Mr. Gantt was, 55 years of age and one ot the leading farmers of the, Belwood section. He was buried Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock at Knob Creek church where a great crowd was in attendance. Mr. Gantt is survived by his wife and seven children. One son Quay Gantt died last Spring from pneumonia at a Ken tucky cold mining town where he was working. His death was a great shock to the family. About seven years ago one of Mr. Gantt’s moth ers. Ledford Gantt was killed in an automobile accident in about the same manner. IS. S. F. ffllH BF 3. S. IS DEN) Beloved Wife Of Noble Veteran Is Victim Of Pneumonia. Funeral On Tuesday. Mrs. B. F Jolley, one of the most respected women of Boiling Springs : died in the She'by hospital Sunday i night following an attack of in ! iluenza. after which she developed pneumonia. She had hern sick for ! two weeks. Mrs. Jolley was 61 years of age and was the third wife of B. F. Joliey. one of the county’s noblest citizens ar.d a veteran of ; the Civil war. Her first husband i was William Roberson. Upon his i death she was survived by one son, 1 Boyce Roberscn, a retired marine : now living at Quantico, Va. She t had been married to Mr. Jolley 21 j years and was a faithful, devoted | wife and neighbor loved by all i who knew her. Tlie funeral will be held at Boil ing Springs Tuesday afternoon at I 2 o’clock, services to be conducted ' by Rev. C. M. Rollins of Wake For est college and Rev. J. L. Jenkins i of Boiling Springs. Pall bearers will j be Messrs. Lipscomb and Summer* i land, Bert Hamrick, L. H. Bigger staff, Hack Bussey and Ostace Hamrick. I 5$ i Committee To Plan Farewell To Gardner Dr. J. S. Dortcn. president of the Shelby Kiwanis club has appoint ed the following committee to make plans for the farewell jahich will be given O. Max Gardner by the K.warns club the first week in Jan uary before he leaves for Raleigh to begin his four year term of of fice; C. C Blanton. O. M. Mull. Paul Webb. Wm. Lineberger, Oliver Anthony, J D. Lineberger, Lee B. Weathers. Many notables of the state will be invited to take part in this farewell to Cleveland’s first governor and the first president of the KiwanLs club. Carrier Boys Sick, Report M ssing Paper With five of the dozen Star carrier boys sick with influenza and not carrying their papers, substi tutes who are not familiar with the j routes are on the Job These subetl „>ues miss quite a few subscribers. Complaints should be retorted p-omptly by phone to The Star of fice and we will endeavor to get’ vour paper to you. Pardon n istca s. until the regular boys are back on their routes.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Dec. 10, 1928, edition 1
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