Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Jan. 8, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Drama Of Drowning Creek Or How Men Worked Hard, Lived Simply And Prospered In N. C. (This article was prepared by Aalph W. Paw-, prominent Aberdeen banker, In response to a request from the Dally News Oreenaboro.) If political economy, ao called, was really an exact science—or in the nature of anything that could fairly be classified as science at all —I would not have the hardihood lo accept your Invitation. You very tindly asked me. on behalf of the Page Trust company to contribute »ur present Information and wisdom »f the future to a symposium of hopes looking toward* the dispelling »f the pervading financial fog. And In the prospectus of contributing authorities were all the high priests, magicians, wizards, prophets, author Ules fact gathers and prognostica tor* of the whole complicated world of political economy. If Babson does not know, what good to ask any body? If Col. Ayres Is 50 per cent wrong why consult a banker from the tobacco belt? If Irving Fisher and the plirenologtsts don't even know what has hit ue, how can the astrologer* and Bob Hanes tell us the cure? Foreign Figures The answer to, there cannot, as long aa they talk In figures. Car loadlngs and fold reserves and clearing house statistic* and Krle earnings and the movements of Pe NOTICB OF STOCK KOLDBBS MEETING Notice St hereby given to the annuel meeting of the stockholders of The Flrtt National Bang of Shelby. N. C.. for the •lection of director! for the ensuing year and for any other bualnate coming before the meeting, to be held Toeeday, January rath. 1B33 at U o’clock a. m at their banking houee In Shelby. N C. FORRB8T SSKRIDOI, Caahler. NOTICE OF STOCKBOLDEB* MEETING Notice le hereby given of the annus’ meeting of the stockholder# of the Union Truet company of Shelby. N. C., for the election of directors for the ensuing year end for any other buetnese coming beforr the meeting at thatr banking house lr Shelby, N. C., on Tuesday, January IMh 1932 at It o'clock a. m. FORREST ESmtroOE. Caehler. BXECFTO>‘« NOTICE Having qu»llfl*d >• executor* of the estate of T. W. Romrlck. deceased o( Cleveland county, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons haring claims against th* said estate to preaant same to us properly proven on or before the I#th day of December IMS or this notto* trill be pleaded in bar of any recovery there of All persons owing the said rate* will please make Immediate settlement to the undersigned. This Jan 1st, IMS. r A. Hamrick, L. M Hamrick, and Mae Hamrick, executors Of estate of T W Hamrick, deceased. gt-Jan. lc 666 liquid or Tablets n«4 InUritftlljr and Salve external^, make a complete and cffMtlra treatment fer Cold*. $5,000 in Cash Prizes Ask Your Druffltt for Particulars COTTON BOUGHT ON CALL OR FIXED PRICE ROWLAND H. OUTZ, HOTEL CHARLES SHELBY, N. C. Getting Up Nights Lowers Vitality you feel old end run-down from I . Oettl Paine, »u%, Night*. Backache, Let; , Nervouanean, Circles adacb - Weakness, «oy Acidity, I want you to quit Buf fering right now. Coma In and get tftlr*- -- ' finder Kyea. Headaches, Burning and Bladder Weakness, caused by Kid I tht I have ever found. It often big Improvement In ft hour*. ink la the greatest med ■what lcine ?1veu uat ask me for Cyatex (Btss-tex). t a only 7So and I guarantee It to quickly combat theae condition* and •atlafy completely, or return empty Package and get your money back. BUTTLE S DRUG STOKE. BILIOUS “I b«y® used Black ^»u»ht... and have not found anythin* that could take it* Draught for bilious ?^en 1 «•» MU h*\ ^*ve * nervous headache and a ner. JOUS, trembling feeling that unfits me for my *°Tk- After I take a few doses of Black Draught, I get an right. When I begin to get bilious, i ,eei tired and run-down, and then the headache and trembling. But Black-Draught re lieves all this.”_y „ Hendrix, Botnerville, Ga. For Indigestion, con JtJWtlon, biliousness, IIN •hedfords BLACKl JgAUGHT ■MM ! ruvtan guano may be interesting, j but they have a great deal less to j do with the thoughts of people than | either the compilers or experts im 'agine. And what has to do with j peoples' thoughts not only has to | do with their lives and actions, in cluding their gettings and spend ings, but as a plain fact is their lives. k Now from the vantage point of a country bank'*'In Aberdeen, we cer tainly cannot toil whether there will be war In Manchuria or Tlmbuektoo, and whether If there is this will in~ crease the demand for silk pajamas or depress the laundry market. Nelth er can we guess whether the gamb lers will buy or sell electric power securities and so revive the mlllen lum on the strenth of three h«irs demagogic appeal to the Ignoramus es of the world by Clifford Pinchot. Solution at Home. Nevertheless we do feel that we can contribute to the symposium. It may be that the salvation of Aberdeen Js not to be sought in Ber lin or Manchuria, or the stock ex change. or In the Babsonchart. It may be It cannot be lound even l.n Raleigh or Washington. It la possi ble—barely possible—that It may be found In Aberdeen, North Carolina. What Is happening in Aberdeen Is to a degree typical of what Is hap pening from Albemarle to Zebulon, the whole territory covered by our observation. And what Is happen ing from Albemarle to Zebulon may be reflected from Miami to Char lottesville—or even further. Now this whole deplorable affair nationally celebrated as “the De pression" is fairy simple when ex amined in personal detail on the waters of drowning creek. Living Off Of Land The old Scotch inhabitants of that district live from the products of the soil. Almost anything In digenous to the temperate aone will grow there. It Is the native health of the famous long leaf pine—etern al source of timber, firewood, tar pitch, and turpentine. Long before any railroad whistle even broke the stillness, or any mortgage company arlved to scatter unversal blesalngs, these people learned how to make the earth support the homes and the Joys and sorrows and the hu man drama that produced every individual of consequence that ever came from there. (Note: If juiy filling station or garage or guano factory or mortgage company ever contributed to the personnel or leadership or Inspiration of the state, it has escaped our notice.) These people steadily Improved their economic, social and lntellec tula lives by a fairly simple process. They were hardy enough to make their living out of the land. It was a country of smoke houses, cow barns, soap kettles, potato hills, pre serve closets and chicken yards. Capitalisation had not appeared Farm land was valued—and seldom sold—as late as 1912 at |5 to $10 an acre. A mortgage was a dls-j grace. capital as wa know It had to be j saved by the more thrifty, by slow ! degrees. This saving, of course, re presented the growth of culture— !the painstsken work of a lifetime, jby men enured to stern realities and taking for granted that the ; major financial virtues of courage I perseverance and thrift reduced | the surplus whence sprang the I school houses and roads and chur ches and bathtubs since superceded {with such grandeur and hurrah. Then came Prosperity. Then Came Easy Monev. Credit Too Easy And with them the underwriter and the land bank and the note] sellers and the finance. Did a1 farmer want anything oti earth j from a houseboat to a melodlan?! All he had to do was to sign a note.: Why then raise nigs? Sign a note and buy bacon. Why wear overalls j keep the children at churns, and! try to save »300, buy a Killing Kup penheimer new suit, send the child ren to the drug store, and buy a piano? Why, for heaven's sake, raise chickens. If you can rats* money? Why indeed! The point need not be stressed. For a thousand vents before 'he miracle of Wall Street appeared the literature of the world find the wisdom and example of the leaders of mankind had taught that this p!ar,et could be successfully Inhabit ed only by those Individuals who cultivate strength, fortitude, perse verance, and billowed a hard road with faith and a set purpose. Sud denly It appear d that all this was changed—that General Motors Ac ceptance corporation, highway bonds and land bank mortgages had pro duced a new world where men no longer had to be frugal, or trained, or have principles or even a home or a name. Here was a system that automatically gave everybody a liv ing—that built towns, schools, courthouses, farms, hotels, movies -all costing anywhere® from ten to a hundred times the total income of tlie entire population Why wor ry? Why save? Why know anything or learn anything, |or get ready fo anything except the benediction? A Case Cited. In detail it comes to this. In 1912 Duncan McDougall owned 437 acre* | a six room house, four cows, 10 pigs, ia flock of turkeys, a grist mill, a mll ! lien feet of timber and *190 In the j bank. Tills represented the work I of two generations, and he wa." i grooming the third to rebuild the i house, add a silo and a library and make a new road and a better school and perhaps save up enough more to send the fourth to the univer sity. Today he has the acres and the house, and owes 39,780. He raises tobacco and corn and his son hr. Just lost his job selling vacuum cleaners. Or— Teaching A hen In 1931 Duncan McLeod was in the identical situation. But he bor rowed no money. He did precisely nothing different from the last hundred yews, except that he sold half his land at $50 an acre and put the proceeds In the savings bank. And he went right on teach } lll« hi* son with a sapling the same old story-that he had to earn wiiat he spent, and before he spent it. Well, his money la still in the bank. There Is plenty of money still in the bank, owned by the Duncan McLeods of this story. Thats one reason It is so hard to | got hold of. They never did lend it to the people to pay their debts, or to build year before last's cupola* The story drags. The answer is plain. Have Character. The depression has separated the sheep from the goats, and rewritten the story of the foolish virgins. Nothing has happened except that the nature of the world and the character of men was not changed by either war, high finance, or the boom. For a short while there! semed to be a premium upon ex travagance, indolence, speculation. It now appears that to prosper a man and his family must still have as much character, and be able to stand as much adversity, able to stand as much adversity and pit his energy and his wisdom against the same difficulties that have built the race from the dawn of history. It u a simple fact that the real farmer of the pioneer type, those now able and willing to adopt his methods and philosophy are pros pering this moment in this vicinity. And equally a fact that where the sturdy human factor is lacking tha land bank and the system based upon figures, and not men, is rush ing to its Just and inevitable con clusion. Unfortunately the philosophy of prosperity and financing has so far weakened both the morale and character of many of the younger generation, that they will have to undergo a Severe training, in the hard school of practical life, un aided by finance companies, gov ernment systems or neeromanCes before they will be fit to beat na ture to a decent living. Hereabout that is the only problem. For the Income of the townsmen in an agri cultural community is simple the surplus after the fanner has had his living. No Outside Help. We don’t expect anyone to get us out of our difficulties. We have no interest whatever in any political scheme, or governmental action, or credit association. We do not be lieve that for any length of time anyone on earth is going to keep us or support us-, or provide manna for us. Neither do we believe anyone is ?oing to come forward with a sys tem or aehenut or plan for any thing else that will make any man living or the land able to keep up on living there filess he has the ability to live off the land, and provide his luxuries from the ac cumulation of his surplus and his lucky breaks. There are plenty such. Net even the federal treasury can help the rest. And as far as farmers are con cerned, the whole commercial mon ey and credit system the whole structure of selling future profits, the whole mechanistic and manu fcaturers theory and practice of capitalisation is an utter failure. A farm Is wwth nothing. The farmer is worth everything. Better a real man with no money Rnd a piece of bottom land, than a whole county and a million dollars, and no man. Aberdeen. ST. C. December 30, 1931 Warns Democrats About Wrangling Washington.—Dem.'crets ware ad vised by Representative Howard. of ’'lebraska. to direm-vag-' favorite son candidacies, "lest- -i he power trusts fwl Internetioncl banksrs defeat the nomination of ?'*nrV:Un Roose velt,” “Klne Oemc'irs.ft *, ten. in nine states In ten, am In favor cf tfye nomination of Oovernor Roosevelt ” he to’-’ the House. “It dees ”o*. roern possible that the power and trust* and interna tional bankers can defeat him Vet. I fear the damnable deed may be dene.” Howard predicted Roosevelt’s op ponents would play their “trump Card" at the DemcKatic gathering here January o With the nomina tion of a friend of the power trust virtually assured in the Republi can party. Howard said, these forc es are working to put the same kind of man as President Hoover at the head of the Democratic ticket. • Reticent About Ago. Madrid—Spanish women are reti cent about their age, which makes it a tough job aelecting those among the 15,000,000 who are over 23 and eligible to exercise suffrage. They voted enthusiastically for the franchise but balk at showing birth certificates | “Mercy Killer’ —I T" Rather than permit longer the suf-, ferlngH of her invalid daughter. Mr*. Rosebud Harris (above), of! Glendale , Cal., shot 20-year-old Helen to death, then ended her own life by Inhaling gas. The frantic mother put eight bullets Into hri daughter’s body as the invalid girl lay asleep In the bed-room of their; modest home. Magazine Article Boost For Gardner As 1932 Candidate Charlotte Writer Thinks Gardner As Vice President Would Please. Charlotte, Jan. 6.—Publicity that has been given Governor O. Max Gardner as a result of the publi cation in The Saturday Evening j Post of his article on North Caro lina’s four pioneering pieces of legislation has resulted in a renew al of talk centering about the gov ernor as a likely democratic vice presidential nominee. The magazine article, entitled ‘‘One State Cleans House,” has been given wide notice and much favor able comment. Last week Senator Royal S. Copeland of New York one of the state's leading members and representative In the upper body of a state udmittedly among the most influential in any demo cratic national convention, praised the Gardner article highly and spoke of North Carolina and its governor In very flattering terms. Makes Fine Impression ■'’.i Admittedly no finer medium of publicity Is available than The Post and among those interested in mat ters pertaining to politics and gov ernment the article will have wide circulation. It has already made a fine impression. North Carolina as tire south's out standing state is well situated geo graphically, and the democratic convention, which is expected to nominate Oov. Franklin D. Roose velt of New York as presidential candidate, will very likely go south or west to select its vice presiden tial nominee. Coming south, it; could do much worse than select a Tar Heel, North Carolina has be come a highly publicized Slate. It has been advertised throughout the nation as a lively, progressive, up and-coming leader in the very front, rank of the states. It's good roads, have become a tradition, end thoUs-| ands of tourists have t’-aveled over them and have tfone home to talk of this state as a model in many) ways. Has Powerful Friends. Governor Gardner, too. should be altogether acceptable to Governn Roosevelt as a running mate. They j are friends, and Governor Roose-i velf has visited the North Carolina first family in the Mansion at Ral eigh. So has Gov. Alfred E. Smith, along with Harry Flood B; rd. form er governor of Virginia, leading democrat of the Old Dominion. All of them are powers ir> the demo cratic party and the.r friendship in the national convention would certainly be an important factor. The same should hold true in ■ event. Newton D. Baker is the nom inee. Baker is from Ohio, and therefore Is not a real westerner. He is more of an easterner, In fact Hie *South should be well situated geographically iu the section from which to name the vice presidential candidate even in event the presi dential candidate comes from Ohio Senator Copeland’s unusually flattering remarks about the gov ernor and North Carolina may have! more in them than mere friendship The New York democrat may he lighting a few small fireworks with i the purpose of using them to prime h later cannonade for Gardner. Such a suggestion is not beyond the realms of possibility, at anv rate. Now It'* Black Chicago—Betel-chewing Asiatics rWHl have nothing on the platinum blonde If the latest; cosmetic idea becomes a vogue. Finger and toe nails. eyebrows, eyelashes and Ups will come in black The idea Is that of Max Hofer. head of the Illinois Hair Dressers’ association. It’s evideut the nation has de cided to gird against the depres sion. Knowing, of course, that a good girdle supply support Near 3 Thousand Couples Marry At York During 1932 South Carolina Town Has Only One Rival As America’s Leading Gretna Green. York, S. C.. Jan. 6.—In the ailegec'J tie presalon of last year, 110 more persons were married here In York county in 1931, than In the previous year of 1930. Last year 2,944 licenses were is sued here at York, against 2.889 licenses in 1930, an increase last year of 55 marriage licenses over the previous year. The record for any one year is 3,050 in 1929. Nearly all the almost 3,000 cou ples came here from North Carofina to enter wedlock, York being the Gretna Green of the South with more weddings for its population than any other Southern town. Its only rival in the United States is a village^tn West Virginia which io the mecca for marriage of a con siderable part of three states. New York Editor Notes Progress Of j N. Carolina Program* (The New York Times.) There are the days when every i government—local, state and na tional—is trying to balance its bud-! get. Such outstanding examples as Milwalkee. Tennessee and North Carolina are interesting to tax payers everywhere. Milwalkee's taxes are low, its public order ex cellent and its treasury solvent Tennessee, after an unusual experi ence with high finance and the usual spending spree, balanced het budget somewhat violently* In the opinion of Governor Gardner of North Carolina, who writes about it in the current Saturday Evening Post, his state best dealt with the common problem. "No miracle has been performed," according to the governor, and other states, for local reasons, might not be able to dp what the North Carolina legislature has recently done. But what was done is worth attention of all American tax payers and the administrators o* public affairs. In the Summer of 1930 Governor Gardner began to prepare for the general assembly of: the following year, and tax bills j were ready when it met. They be lieve in North Carolina that the preparedness course they followed is partly responsible for the preser.. contrast between the condition bi their treasury and that of the fed eral government. During the last two years $9,750,000 of the states debt was paid off. and $20,000,000 will have been paid on the bonded debt by this administration. But the specific contributions of the general assembly to the sltuatirn as revealed in 1931 were these: They “stopped the advancing tax burden in Its tracks” by reducing state ex penses "and turned the curve of taxation downward” at the same time; county Jurisdiction over roads and schools was abolished, and-the!' centralization at Raleigh cut the property tax $12,000,000. This year, property which in 1921 paid 85 per cent of the sttyjte tax will pay 52 per cent. No longer may a small board in a town or county "con fiscate the property of its citizens through unlimited and unrestrained power to mortgage its future.” Tire local government act, which makes a state commission the supervisor of all local financing-—though the people by vote may give the an proval which the commission has refused—changed all that. As if he heard the incredulous North exclaiming at the new spirit in the South to centralize at the state capital and to subordinate local self-government, Governor Gardner concludes his recital; "New conditions demand new remedies; for new wine, new bottles,”’ Speak ing on the same subject of growing costs of local government, this is Night Coughing Quickly Stopped In a few minutes after taking Thoxlne, a doctor's famous prescrip tion, your cough stops. It acts on a new principle—relieves throat irri tation and goes direct to the inter nal cause not reached by ordinary cough remedies. Most coughs are caused by an ir ritated throat. Thoxlne- stops these at once. Sate for the whole family —guaranteed no dope. Money back if not satisfied. 35c. Suttle’s Drug Store and all other good Drug stores. advt. NOTIC E ^ Ol MUST MEETING OE CREDITORS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OP THE UNrTED STATES FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OP NORTH CAROLINA IN BANKRUPTCY. Ie the matter of H D. Jolley, trading as Soda and Cigar Shop, (Shelby. N. C.) Bankrupt. Notice is hereby given to all creditor* and other parties tn interest that the above named pary has been adjudicated a bankrupt; that the Jtrst meeting ot the creditor* will be held In the taw office of the undersigned Referee. *00 Law Building, Charlotte. N C.. on Saturday, the #th day of January. t*'J3, at 10:30 o'clock A. M., at wl^lch time and place creditor* may attend, prove their claims, elect a trustee, examine the bankrupt, and transact such other business a* jnay properly come bPfore said meeting This meeting may be continued from time to time without further notice, AH claims should be made upon the regular bankruptcy form* properly veri fied and sworn to. and filad with the undersigned referee This the 30th day of December. 1*31. R. Marlon Ross. Referee \n Bankruptcy Charlotte. N c. it-Jan ic ritually what Bernard M. Baruch told the South Carolina legislature last spring Will Not Die For Larceny Of Shoes fcxecutive Counsel to Recommend Negro's Death Sentence Be Commuted. Raleigh.—John Moore, who has stood under the shadow of the death penalty for weeks because he stole a pair of shoes In tyinston-Salem, is not to die for his offense. After a hearing, Tyre C, Taylor, executive counsel to Governor Gard ner, announced he would recom mend commutation of Moore's sen tence to .life imprisonment. The executive Counsel's word is practic ally final in such matters, Moore was convicted of figst de gree burglary, which, under the North Carolina law, consists of en try Into a house or room, in which people are sleeping, for an illegal purpose. Moore stole the shoes, from a room in whiph a negro girl slept. The Jury which tried him recom mended mercy, but Such a recom mendation has no legal standing in a North Carolina court, so Moore was sentenced to die in the electric chair. Beauty Parlor—Dried Hay. (From The Stanly News and Press.) They are now using a beaufy parlor device out in the west fo> drying hay. Since it ha? not been possible to do all the haying while the sun shines, a mechanical, dryer similar to the hair dryer used in beauty parlors, has been put into use. This enables the farmer t cut his hay while it is green, and eliminates the daner of getting it wet after It dries out. Cows. It understood, add another inch to the. cream line on the milk bottle with out being told when they are fed On machine.dried hay. Who will be the first Stanly County farmer to rig up a hay dryer? Beaten by Japs Here is a recent photo of Culver B. Chamberlain, American Vice Consul at Mukden. Manchuria, who was set unon and beaten by Jap anese soldiers while driving to th?: railroad station in the Manchurian city. Chamberlain, whose home is in Kansas City, Mo., was recently transferred from Canton. China, to Harbin on account of his linguistic ; ability. Norma Shearer 1S ‘PRIVATE LIVES’ Monday & Tuesday j — lCc and 25c — 1 WEBB THEATRE j '!■■■» turn a i'mu To Aid Poor With Wheat Contribution Forty Million Bushels to Be Mini' Available Through Relief Agencies. Washington.—Forty million bush els of Farm Board wheat was vote* by the senate for relief of hu»g<'! and suffering among the million of the nation’s unemployed It wa the first direct federal relief pi. petal approved by either house. The senate passed and sent to th* house the Capper joint resolutior directing the Farm Board to pla*. this amount, one-fourth of its grea’ store, at the disposal of the Ret Cra’s and other relief agencies u be milled and furnished free *r destitute and needy persons. The action followed testimony *j Governor Gifford Pinchot of Penn sylvania. and John L. Lewis of th* United Mine Workers, telling of dirt suffering in Pennsylvania and othei mining state;. Lewis demanded re lief for “destitute population I u more than 1.200,000" and Pinch* r attacked the administration for it* opposition to federal relief. *■** Experts ay we must .zither ad just or revi e our war debts Pro’* ably meaning we’ve got to Fix it ut some way so we know we atw going to get; our money. Things have got so bad that ;:h< man on the street says stock mar ket tuckers are wafting fer a re bait. Mothers! to reduce your- fam ily “Colds-Tax” — | use the Vick Plan for Better “Con-, trcl-c—Colds” i n | your Home. F-tf PONTIAC ANNOUNCES A NEW 6, A NEW V-8 chief of values Pontiac offers these important developments at no extra cost SYNCRO-MESH ■ QUIET SECOND ■ FREEWHEELING ■ RIDE CONTROL ■ LONGER WHEELBASE ■ INCREASED POWER AND HIGH SPEED ■ GREATER ECONOMY NEW, ROOMIER FISHER BODIES ■ RUBBER CUSHIONING AT 47 CHASSIS POINTS ■ ENCLOSED SPRINGS ■ RIDING COMFORT ■ FULL PRESSURE LUBRICATION THE NEW PONTIAC SIX Brings the Important Developments of the Year to itie Low-P-ica Field Value takes on an entirely new meaning vith ‘.he n-w Pontiac Six just introduced. Here Vou’U find ii*i riding comfort, great speed and power, smart it at extremely low first-cost and low running The transmission is Syncro-Mesh for ell - less shi-fi* ing. I lie new second gear is quiet. Then you have free wheeling . ... all three of these improvements at no extra cost. There's a big, powerful motor for e •.:?•» speed, extra pick-up,'extra stamina. ‘ '**“ Comfort is notably advanced — Ride Contra! !o sojust shock absorbers as you drive; long wheelbase; rubber cushioning at 47 chassis points; enclosed soritvji. Interiors, too, present unusual values . . . rich, well tailored upholstery, easy-reading dock-type instru ments, tasteful appdintments. See this new Pontiac - ask for a demonstration. You’ll agree it is an outstand ing General Motors value. G. M. A. C. terms, if vCU wish. THE NEW PONTIAC V-S Offers the Distinction of V-8 Per formance at a List Price under *850 Only "luxury” cars have offered the brilliant, reliable V-type motor. Now you can hare it in Fontiac V-Eight at a list price below $850! And with distinctive performance you also get Syncro-Mesh, quiet second gear, free wheeling, Ride Control. . . . Weight and length are what a powerful, fast car requires for fine balance and roominess. Fisher craftsmen have contributed strik ing body design, rich interior finish. If you have owned smaller, less capable cars, Pontiac V-Eight will advance all your motoring standards without greatly increasing your expenditure. If you have driven expensive cars, Pontiac V-Eight will give you most of the same advantages at far lower cost. Let us show you how this remarkable car <ombino engineering leadership and true riding luxury at I price never before, known in automotive history. • J. Lawrence Lackey west w,™ st. Shelby, N. C. >
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Jan. 8, 1932, edition 1
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