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.THE HYDE COUNTY HERALD
^ News of the richest agricultural county in the foremost historical aisd recreational area of NOirm Carolina
No. 38
'OLIxicianS
^USY on eve
OF PRIMARY
SWAN QUARTER, N. C. THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1944
Single Copy 5 Cents
WHY DO THEY
FAIL TO GET
OVERSEAS MAIL?
Pilots—After a Job Well Done
phe;
Cn!^L^‘^PPorters Confident Navy Says It May Be Your
Will Give Their
“Pdidate Majority
lUsy in Hyde county are
Irs jjj nnsing interest among vot-
Ihetn minute effort to get
ltd cag*! fP .i-o file polls Saturday
I'etejan primary.
Fedicf P°'ifical obser\'ers are
pth ^ light vote compared
tnly years. Some estimate
I Pg]] f® 1,000 votes will be cast.
Fse a,. at , 6:30 a. m. and
Chief P- »’■
face fg ^'iferest centers on the
“ Gre^ Sevemor in which Major
^vir ^lierry of Gastonia, Dr.
Pnd^np ^^eDonald of Greensboro,
F Pitiet
Pad candidates. Cherry
iiotis in liofh have organiza-
tedief county. Both sides are
fPres?^ ^i'^fory, but the general
'arty talking to
arry ®®ders is that Cherry will
thJ’’® ^aee “for renresentative has' o^'^anization carefully routing it.
P- n Tiir, j*" ^
county.
Own Fault; Address Care
fully and Use V-Mail
Servicemen overseas and their
families at home in the Sixth Na
val District worry about each oth
er when the mail is slow getting
through, but there is really no
great reason for concern. I
The Navy’s Fleet ■ Post Offices '
are operating 24 hours a day to |
give sendee to the Fleet and even
tually mail will get through as ;
swiftly as wartime conditions per
mit.
The Navy’s advice is to keep
writing often, address mail clearly
and correctly and speed it on its
way by Sending it V-mail—which
is air mail all the way through.
There are any number of reasons
why mail addressed to men in the
Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard
and Merchant Marine may be de
layed, even with a vast Navv mail
local cam-;
according to its Navy Postal Ser-
D. Midgett, Jr., of En-1
^Partp of Swan I
Wi, candidates. j
Sla(igg^"}®®ht E. S. Fisher of
•lohn is being opposed by
iiecorrl' ,f^®®Pess of Engelhard for Person
p^mer’s ^ , tVinno-h
Mail to the members of the Ar-
But when mail is lost, or unde
livered, the blame almost inevitab
ly can be placed at one of two |
sources—the servdeeman or the
_ who wrote him — even
®'’’s Judge. " I though it is true that ships do get
Seii^tp^® two seats in the State sunk and majl does go to the bot-
tlifee f^i® district there are foui with them,
tent p^^^^idates. They are incum-
’’'gton “ffus” Daniels of Wash-1 "led Services overseas has reached
"atice Roy Hampton and Zeb the staggering total of 2.5.000,000
Pive of Plymouth. j pieces a week. Nearly 3,000,000 of
Seat jv, '^^P'iidates are out for the these are insufficiently or incor-
ty fP® U. S. Senate now held rectly addressed,
fonjjg R. Reynolds. They are Some ideas of the tenacity and
of Ciy*!® R- Hoey! efficiency of the Army and Navy
a^d ftep. Cameron Morrison^ postal clerks can be drawn from
L. Hitch of Charlotte, the fact that, of these millions of
and r, ^^Pamons of Burlington Poorly or wrongly addressed let-
aon. p Yoeman Newton of Gib- ters, more than 97 per cent even-
OFFICIAL U. #. NAVY PHOTOGRAPH.
liave^,'^®y> Morrison and Ritch tuallv reach their destination. But
Jeneroi^?®*^ active campaigns. The delay usually, and understand-
talltig ‘ iP’Pression one gathers ™PS,into months,
that p '^tth political leaders is .® handling and distribution of
the ^tll get a majority of ^uPtime mail, the Naval Postal
Cam ip Hyde county with Service points out, even when it’s
Morrison second. .correctly addressed, is a compli-
have „ tncumbent State officials ®^ted and mtricate oneration. Se
Navy Helical fighter pilots relax in their carrier “ready
room” and talk over their recentc successful interception of
Jap Zeros. Catching a flight of 20 to 24 of these enemy
planes headed for Tarawa, the United States airmen shot down
17 in a single action without losing a man. Seated directly
liehind the picture of the girl is dark-haired Lt. (j. g.) Eugene
R. Hanks, Gibbs, Idaho, who shot down five Zeros in less than
5 minutes. aw,
HAS ANYONE IN HYDE
SEEN BIGGER TURTLE?!
NEW DUCK STAMP
READY TO PRINT
Iredell County Man Lands
Turtle Weighing 25
Pounds
Mud
Will Carry Drawing of Well-
Known Wildlife Artist,
Walter Weber
of Q opposition. W. N. Crawford ®upRy necessitates codes, keys and
inatin®'^"®]>oro is seeking the nom-' Pumpers. A great percentage of
ovej 1 for Secretary of State p®''®' personnel is continually on
^harii"^^ Eure; State Treasurer “p ^p®'^®- Transportation is
L. J Johnson is opposed by hazardous waters and
Pfed g®JPPS of Chapel Hilb and “elds. The added obstacles of dis-
Has anyone in Hyde county everi
captured a mud turtle that weigh
ed more than 25 ounds? That
The new “duck stamp’’ to be is
sued for the 1944-45 hunting sea-
the question that came to our mind ®®p taken from a drawing
when we read the story of how an by Walter A. Weber, well known
Iredell county man did just that wildlife artist. Secretary of the
near Moo«"svine. L. Ickes was ad-
! vised today by the Fish and Wild-
-- The story of how Mr. and Mrs. life Service.
^PPter of Huntersville is f?”®®’ supn'y- casualty and rou- j C. H. Morrow ’landed the big tur- j Eleventh in the series the new
9°’' Auditor against j f'"® transfers make the Navy Mail j tie, which they weighed at a ' migratorj’ bird hunting stamp un-
CaL. !^®®s Pou. I Service much more complex than i neighboring store, is told as fol- iversallv cnlleH •
t’'® Governor' f^® routine pickun and delivery of lows in the Mooresville Enter-, now in the hands of engravers’ and
1. h.,1 . ■ Rallentine of Vnrina. W. i ^ domestic nostoffice. | prise: Iwill be available to the mihUe ot
Since mail from home is admit- ■ Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Morrow all first and second class pLt of-
, "re fishing in the lake. They fices on July 1.
of men overseas, the Navy makes 1 saw the line of one hook move and
every human effort to see that ''
men of the Na\w, Marine Corns,
Coast Guard and Merchant Ma
rine get their mail as soon as pos-
°f Camden, former' . .
®rs, and James T. I.yda of redly a primary factor in morale! were fishing in
’’'^^nsboro.
hUPTON HEADS
BELHAVEN lions CLUB
sible wherever thev are. There are
M.. 71- ^ '.,“1 Mr. Weber, who is assistant cu-
thinkine he had^^" R, ^ator of birds in the National Mu-
thmking he had caught a freight Washington, D. C., has chos-
' , , . , . , , ®d for h*s subject three white-
Finally he eased his load to the fronted geese—part of a flock
surface of the water and saw what
I ’>”■'2= ~»fl clerk. Te h.d causSTIiw lie head oH I 5 k . '
J thr Berave T ona^ emh ' assistants assigned turtle larger than a man’s fist-L
1 regut! ad - t M^ririe Corns and i and we mtn a haymaker’s fist. 7." t-f
in Panwo tft wlfv While Mrs. Moirow held the ?! waterfowl and to phila-
-rantefiro. last week. »_ -i . ... n/r n*- j j . • . telists and conservationists
line Mr. Morrow waded out into xt i
the water, seized tJie turtle by the aiVp fa * i ^
. J Ii. t.* . ^ twice the size of a special deliv-
a d M d ^®"y it costs $1 and may be
and New, land , , r .n Purchased singly, in blocks, or in
That was just the start of the 28 stamps,
battle. That turt e “blowed” at Everyone over 16 years of
n A V, y4 I , a V.. r-1 - ^
At last count
Jn?**'®*' offipp there were over 1.700 Navy post-
i"S . Still.,i T-' Fie,. Poe. Elffi-
apr.,.0 covcr a city block in each
Gaylord, Secre-ji^^gg ^
d/'’’®® Francisco
A V second vice-presi- ’Vp-i,
Wy’a^ j "‘Gus’’ Gaylord, Secre- !
^'on Claude Ricks, f,n,id,n,r p.rp,. in j,igh.
outgoing
letters and 5,900,000 parcels in a
month.
Before the war every country in
the world, with few
’Tamer RpTff TpO °^®'- H*
Georve ^ k ! handles .30.000,000
. ^eorge Aycock, Robert ,.ttpr= Pr,d
Maxwell Carawan,
to the state Lions
T^harigj.®®; which will be held at
®l next^l*' June, will be appoint
Boti. V,
ith T ■'
^eakei- ''n* TBe guest
Barolij mT?® introduced by
^'^'lidat Norman is a
tfom k, J® for the State Senate
R district.
N'm • McCl
®’'t Thursday night.
T ,^®®® Norman of the Ply-
Mr Morrow like a lion and lunged hunts migratory waterfowl is L
at him Again Mr. Morrow seized, q^j^ed to have a Federal hunting
him with his hands and was almost,stamp in his possession, validated
puBed into the water by his signature. The stamp, which
P- 11. Mrs. Morrow, who ; is transferable, remains valid
exceptions, by this time had retreated a safejfor one venr from T.iK. i fp t.,po
iwas represented by ships sailing | distance, to bring him a big stick, i 30 ^ .1^0 the nlapp pf
the seven seas. Today Americans ! He took the stick and beat the tur-' it”, iTcense ^
tie over the head until he was sub- ^ license,
dued.
Mr. Morrow ket the big'mon
^ are scattered all over the world
' and onlv the overburdened trans-
, ports of Allied nations are avail-
I able to carry mail.
I War has interrupted trade
j routes, and few ports of entry are
o ■ "icvkiean of PI..mon+Ti I ^'’^Bable to which mail can be
the ^'"'Pander Guv^C Ha!^?s^!^F ease. Mail to
^SAR, via the Pacific has
guests ot tne ceased. Certain Atlantic and Medi
terranean routes are the only
ocean lanes open to mail for Am
ericans in the Far East. Air trans
portation is the only service to
many far flung overseas bases.
Despite these substantial ob
stacles, the Navy gets mail
through as quickly and surely as
possible — and could improve the
Service if civilians and servicemen
will exercise a little care in help-
?®as
Plentiful foods
, potatoes, canned
green and wax
in plentiful supply
-fing V''" P'ost of the country
^inisL:.“''®- the War Food Ad-
U’ food?®" ®®Pprts. Other plenti-
Pow include: oranges,
butt!?'!-; beans;- „„ itg ^
"^aising. H citrus marmalade; | “jbe
The money realized from duck
stamps is used by the Fish and
^^EAKS^™ALF ANCESTORS OF CITIZENS
OFMAJ.CHERRY,
Washington Attorney Tells
Hyde Court And Audience
Cherry Well Qualified
Views Small Criminal Docket In Hyde
Court; Speaks To Grand Jurors On Respon
sibilities Of Citizens In Nation At War.
CROATAN CIRCUIT HAS
ENERGETIC PREACHER
wmm
GOOD STOCK SAYS JUDGE
“I hope Hyde county will give
Gregg Cherry an overwhelming ^ ^ ^
maioritv in the primary Satur- ouperior Lourt JuiTst From Carteret County
Points Out Good Ancestorial Stock As Ke
cratic party in Eastern North'
North Carolina, told the citizens'
gathered in the county courtroom j
in Swan Quarter for the opening j
of the May Superior court session'
Monday morning. Said Mr. Carter,;
“I am certain that Gregg Cherry,
will win the gubernatorial nomin
ation by a comfortable margin.'
While no man big enough to be
governor would hold it against a
county for voting against him, it
doesn’t hurt to be on the winning
side.’’ He pointed out that Hvde
county has voted for few winning
candidates for governor in recent
years. j
Mr. Carter pointed out the qual-
ities of Major Cherry that make
him well qualified to serv^e as
leader of the State. He told of the
hard road that the candidate from
Gastonia came up to get to the'
place where he is today. “He has
made a success by hard work,’’
said Mr. Carter, who said such a
record was on the white side on
the ledger in favor of Mr. Cherry.
Because of his services in the
last war, Mr. Carter pointed out
that Mr. Cherry was best qualified
to handle the problems of return
ing war veterans. Mr. Cherry vol
unteered in the last war and serv-1
ed overseas as captain of a ma- ■
chine gun company. One of the'
REV. W. B. PARKIN, a native
The people of the coastland of
North Carolina possess more of
j real character than those living
I any place else on the face of the
I earth. Judge Luther Hamilton told
I the Hyde county grand jury Mon-
! day morning at the opening of the
j May term of Superior court at
Swan Quarter when he learned
that there was little crime in the
county from court cases docketed
for trial. “We are the crux of the
salt,” he said, explaining that he
was born and reared on the shores
of Core Sound at Atlantic in Car
teret County.
I “Through the veins of the peo-
, pie of Eastern North Carolina
flow some of the purest Anglo-
I Saxon blood as you will find any-
where in this country,” he said,
’ going on to e.xplain that in the
I whole state only 1-6 of one per
I cent are foreign bom. The jurist
said he liked to mingle with peo
ple of his kind; people with names
that were familiar to him.
I He went on, “Through the veins
of your here in Hyde county flows
opportunity.” “You have a great
county,” he told the jurors, saying
that it had many great blessings,
although it was not endowed with
- - ... f 7. TVT /-. • blood of conduerors—men who
major plaks in the platform of Beaufort, N. C., is pator of the ; made sacrifices to make the world
the Gastonian is aid for returning Tour Methodist churches on the a better place in which to live. It
servicemen Dare county mainland comprising been a long time since I vis-
The Washington attorney re- charges at Stumpy Point, Manns Quarter,” he said, “but
viewed Mr. Cherry’s long legisla- Harbor, East Lake and Mashoes.
tive career saying that this above He served a year ago at Hatteras ^ ^ad the
all else made him the man of the He studied at Emory and Duke
hour to serve as head of the gov- Universities. His grandfather
government in North Carolina dur- came to Beaufort from Hull
ing this war permd and the com- Yorkshire England and settled in ^reat wealth
mg peace. “He has served every Beaufort and fathered 11 children. I T i
term in the lAssembly since 1931,” Young Mr. Parkin makes his home ’ ^ ^®b ^be jurors to
Mr. Carter said, pointing to the at Stumpy Point. This church has S 1 responsibili-
outstanding committee assign- 22O members. He preaches there L®® ®bat have been thrust upon
ments he has held with credit. every Sunday morning except the Americans by the
‘ He IS unsuTpassed bv any man fifth Sunday. Manns Harbor ^^at is engulfing
as far as being equipped to serve,” church has 179 members and he IkL H^uuRon said
Carter told the Hvd® audience preaches there Sunday afternoons S ouTfor ^^®
‘He has an intimate knowledge of at 3 p. m. He preaches at East forefathers and be coura-
the working of the government,” Lake every second and ^
^®ht'® n 7- k fourth Sunday nights, and at Ma- bard for us to visualize
Mr. Carter, a staunch Demo- shoes every first Sunday night *'be peace of our coun-
crat, toW those in the _ courtroom Mashoes is the smallest wth onlv bard to under-
with what esteem Major Cherry 37 members. His churches have S'oinBl on across the
A k„ kk„ Tx 4-,., ' sea . . . We have to be present to
realize the horrors . . . seeing lov
ed ones pulled from the bomb
shattered rubbish . . . see their
lives snuffed out by the bombs . . .
see them die and fail like birds,”
he told an interested audience.
The jurist made a point of the
will be the
IS held by the Democratic party. certificates of excel-
He has carried the banner of the ,ence. Mr. Parkin is planning a
narty for many years, now,” Mr. g^la occasion at the Stumnv Point
Carter said He deserves your church in August when Senator-
vote, and the nomination. I hope Elect Clyde R. Hoey
Hyde county will give him an speaker
overwhelming vote Saturday.” j _J
candidate for one of the three ’ DGETT TO TRAIN FURTHER fact people of the home front must
seats in the State senate from this ATHENS, GA. NAVY SCHOOL take more responsibility in their
district spoke briefly in behalf of , government if they are to justify
his candidacy. Others in the race Athens, Ga.—Naval Aviation being worthy of the sacrifices be-
are Roy Hampton of Plymouth Cadet George E. Midgett, of En- made by their fellowmen
and E. A. Daniel of Washington, gelhard. has reported to the U. S. across the sea fighting under the
Daniels seeks re-election for a Navy Pre-Flight School here for Neatest difficulties to preserve
second term. ; three months of intensive physical freedom. The founders of this na-
' toughtening and instruction in ad- ^ion, left us of today with many
FUNERAL HELD THURSDAY ■ vanced ground school subjects, freedoms and privileges, he said,
FOR ANDREW BURRUS Upon successful completion of the but they also left with us certain
a big feast. The turtle practically: °*'b®r funds for the purchase and
covered the bottom of a 450 gal-i waterfowl refuges
Ion barrel. That turtle is as big as
the cushion in a fat man’s chair.
Mr. Pox has lost some pigs kept
throughout the country. Ninety
percent of the fund goes for this
pumose, while the remainder is
near the lake and it is believed L.®®*^ for pnntign and distribu-
that turtle could tell where theylL®" stamps, enforcement of the
went. And by the way did you ¥Hunting Stamp
know a turtle could bite you after' ®^^®^ Federal acts for
his head is severed from the body ’'''® migratory birds.
beat for 1934-36, the first year of is-
and that its heart will
some twelve hours
been killed and dressed?
after it has ®'>®’ 635,000 stamps were sold.
Jr’eak sales occurred in 1941-32
WIDOW’S BARN BURNS
WHEN LIGHTENING STRIKES
Mrs. Sarah Ann Stowe of Eng
elhard lost her barn, more than a
hundred dollars worth of com and
some miscellaneous farm and
home utensils when lightning
and 7’ dS Navy Department
KV®bydrated sLps sova^OTr ! ®"® ®'’®®ytbing possible to uig-,
Bakes- wW flour and!Postal
les. ’ *^acaroni’ ssnjxrkofH. I Ps^'sonnel in the various Navy! 7. i ^k k -u- r. T' °
food ®^‘»i®al- and I ’ ’ P®st Offices.” declares Lieuten-1 building Saturday ev.
ood. , and rye breakfast j ^ Cypress' between 8 And 9 o’clock. It
■ ______ Drive, North Charleston, S. ®k”y’'®''®'^ destroyed
'•'ELEpi^ES rOMINr ^®™’y ®f 923 Ponce de Leon help arrived.
LZ!: ^^'^^^^i Ave., Atlanta, Ga., Officer-in-Bong was the first preson
®f manufacture of ^barp of the Fleet Office in the ^® ^®®'^® ^re.
®''t of ol*® t®>®Phones to the ex- Gharieston Navy Yard. “The main
bep„ sets per quarter 1 ®auses of delay in getting mail to
^^thorized by the War i of the Naval forces are
jb'® exw Board. First deliveries! *^be fact that mail is im-
^ lOo oriA®^ Approximate- j addressed, or possibly
Phoneg’ ®k *'®''' orders for tele- , baf_ mUers on which air postage
Three executives of the Otis El
evator Company spent the week
end at Bodie Island clubhouse
from where they made jaunts to
the Oregon Inlet fishing grounds
with Capt. Charlie Perry of Kitty
Hawk, and with Earl Mann, care
taker of the club.
Frank Morris and Fred Kuelle
of the New York office, and Har
old Swanson of the Philadelphia
„ -7 thot For leie- , "■* 7,^7. „„„ mia. oue xvae- office came down Friday morning-
®ause of 1 , ®annot be filled be- been paid does not go air mail bum, a son, John Madison, at; to the club which is owned bv Da
equipment are ac- because of the inability to fly the Fowle Memorial hospital, Thurs- vid Lindquist, Chief Engineer of
’"e each month. (Please turn to Page 4) day. May 18. the Otis Elevator Compfny
SWAN QUARTER
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rae-
when 1,440,000 were sold. Despite
wartime restrictions on hunting
due to lack of ammunition and
gasoline, more than 1,125,00 of ^ess
the current series have been sold
through March 31, 1944.
OTIS ELEVATOR EXECUTIVES
fishing AT OREGON INLET
j course, he will be transferred to a
Funeral services for Andrew Naval air station to begin prog-
Burms, who passed away last rfissive flight training prepara-
Monday in a New York hospital,. J®ming a combat unit,
were held from the old home near Midgett, son of Mr. and Mrs. P.
Middletown Thursday afternoon U- Midgett, Jr., graduated
at 1 o’clock with the Rev. J. T. Engelhard high school in 1941 and
Brown, Christian minister officia- attended The Citadel, Charleston,
ting. Interment was in the family f®’" years. He completed
cemetery. Naval Flight Preparatory School
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.' Columbia, S. C., and was trans
and we must not
jvx:*./ wiv. lllL/ti” ■\X7”lJT.p • i kOUIVlXlIi^ 11C tWU SlOL-dO, J.TJ.XO. '
ster in a barrel while he planned i ”;BBbfe semice to supplement Swindell and Mrs. James f®"ed here from the CAA
responsibilities
shirk them.
Stating that America and her
Allies must have courage at the
paace table after the war is won
from ®’^ the battlefields. Judge Hamil
ton said, “My feeling is that if
after this war more courage is not
demonstrated and there is not
enough forthrightness found
there, we will have a repetition of
^7777 War ^be last conflict. And if we don’t
Twiford of Middletown and two Service School, Macon, b^J® ?'don°rtWnk^ dviHzlitof is
brothers, Bryan Burrus of New, F^«orgid. . saving, anyway.”
The jurist from Carteret took
Bern and Claud Burrus of Middle-
town.
FUNERAL HELD FOR
MRS. SELBY THURSDAY
FUNERAL HELD FRIDAY
FOR J. R. MASON
Funeral ser\’ices for J. R. Ma-
! son, 63, farmer and mill operator.
Funeral services for Mrs. Nancy were held at the home near Swan
Selby 71, were held at the home Quarter Friday with the Rev. C.
rear Middletown, Thursday at 2 W. Guthrie assisted by two visit;
o’clock with the Rev. J. T. Brown iug’ Baptist ministers, officiating,
officiating. Interment was in the Interment was in the family plot.
Gulrock cemetery. Mr. Mason passed away in
Mrs. Selbv pas^sed away Wed-1 Fowle Memorial hospital in Wash- |
nesday. May 17, after a short ill-ijn&ton Wednesday morning follow- the jurors ttiarour ancestors made
I mg an illness of several weeks, great sacrifices to give us the
Surviving are her two sons,' He was a member of Providence greatest nation on the face of the
Thaxton Selby of Middletown, and Methodist church and for a num- | earth. He explained that the ereat
Alfred Selby of Norfolk, one bro-, ber of years was a steward in the and old Chinese nation with all
ther, Ozzrow Gibbs '
the view that we are in for many
more sacrifices before the war will
be over. “And sad as it is, before
it is over we are going to have
some of our loved ones coughing
up their lungs as the result of
poison gas and have them die like
birds,” he said. Going on, he com
mented, “It is necessary that this
happen. Nothing has been vouch
safed without sacrifices.”
The judge went on to explain to
town, one sister, Mrs. Addie Evins
of Norfolk and two grandsons,
Chester and Thaxton Wade.
ED. HODES LOSES BARN
WHEN LIGHTENING STRIKES
Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. Roy Jorden, Virginia, Marie
Mason, army nurse, Italy; and
Mary Elizabeth, Swan Quarter;
of its love for peace, had stood the
onslaught of the beastly men of
the land of the Rising Sun only by
courage. “Nothing has been pre
served through the years that is
four sons, Clyde, Kentucky, Mar-' worthwhile that has not come
vin; Harvey, Swan Quarter and through sacrifice,” he said, point-
John Jessie, overseas.
REPORT FOR LIMITED
SERVICE IN THE ARMY
Ed Hodges, Swan Quarter town
ship farmer, lofet his bam and a
considerable amount of com and a
number of plows and other farm
equipment when it was strack by Max Gibbs of Middletown and
lightning Saturday evening during; Odell Williams of Swan Quarter
a severe electrical storm that left Wednesday, May 17, to re
swept over this section Saturday port for induction into the Army,
evening, according to reports rea- They were accepted sometime be
cking this newspaper Monday. fore the limited duty.
mg out through numerous stories
recorded in history and in holy
writ.
The jurist kept the jurors and a
courtroom filled with interested
spectators listening for more than
an hour to his words that rolled
out as he brought a message hear
ing on the citizens responsibilities
and his rights in this grcrot fed-
(Please turn bo page 4)
.X-
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