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3 results for The State Vol. 7 Issue 22, Oct 1939
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Record #:
15228
Abstract:
Gravestones in Rowland, Robeson County, mark a most unusual occurrence: two men and two women of the same name and the same age, died in the same year and were buried in the same graveyard. This unusual happening remains a mystery even to residents of Rowland.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 7 Issue 22, Oct 1939, p4-5, f
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Record #:
17530
Author(s):
Abstract:
Edward D. Danziger, Vienna's famous candy king, has settled with his wife and family in Chapel Hill. Although he had received Austria's highest medal for bravery while fighting and being captured on the Russian front in World War I, he had to leave the country in 1939 when Hitler took over Austria because his grandfather was Jewish. His recipes are his own and he has devoted his whole life to the candy business. Tripp recounts how he came to Chapel Hill and opened Danziger's Candy and Coffee Shop on Franklin Street.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 7 Issue 22, Oct 1939, p1, por
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Record #:
17531
Author(s):
Abstract:
Betts graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1855. He converted to Methodism while there and was later licensed to preach. During the Civil War he served four years as chaplain of the 30th N.C. Regiment and kept a journal. After the war, he published it as EXPERIENCES OF A CONFEDERATE CHAPLAIN.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 7 Issue 22, Oct 1939, p9-10, por
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