Newspapers / The News-Herald (Ahoskie, N.C.) / April 14, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE EUROPEAN WAR A YEAR AGOTHIS WEE) April 10, 1915. French pained In th? Wotvrt ?nd on the St. MIMel-PoiA-a-Meus-' son front. Otrmtna Soot Fi%hch between tho Orno and tho Mouoo, In Lo Protre foreet,1 and at Bezange la Srande. Ruaaians began attack on Ger mane between Uxaok and Boakld pMMI. Auetro-Germane repulsed strong Russian attack In Opor valley. British relief steamsr Harpalyce torpedoed In North sea. Premier Borden called for second Canadian expeditionary force. April 11, 1911. Germans mads soma recoveries against the French and took throe towns from Belgians. Germans in Infantry advance lost heavily by artillery attack of French. Russians held all the ,naln ridges of the Carpathians and approached the Uzsok valley. German cruiser Kronprins Wll holm arrived at Newport News. Allied fleet bombarded Darda nelles forts from gulf of Saros. Austro-Hungary accused allies of atrocities and breaches of Inter national law. Great recruiting campaign be gan In London. Germany protested the shipment of arms from America to allies. April 12, 1915. Fierce fighting In France, Ger mans being repulsed at Lea Epar ges, but gaining in Allly and Ls Pretre forests. Russians badly beaten near Kail ouwka and repulsed east of Uzsok pass. German attack on Szafrsnkl re pulsed. French battleship and aeroplanes bombard Turk camp at Gaza. German dirigible dropped bombs on Nancy. British defeated Turks and Kurds in Mesopotamia. ?_ April 13, 1915. French made gains near Berry au-Bac, but were repulsed at other points. Germans near Thionvllle and Metz heavily re-enforced. Austro-Germans violently at tacked Russian left wing. Russians gained in Uzsok region, near Koziouwka and on the Nle men. Ossowetz bombarded by Ger mans. French aviators bombarded mili tary hangars at Vigneulles. Many killed by explosion at naval reserve station in Lerwick, Shet land. German shells fall on Swiss ter ritory. ' April 14, 1915. French penetrated German line at Marchevllle, but were driven out. French artillery checked German attack at Lea Eparges. Russians drove Auatrians from Medzo Laborcz, Hungary. Germans attacked Szafranki near Ostrolenka. Dutch and Swedish steamers blown up in North sea. Zeppelin made night raid over Tyne district of England; another was wrecked by gunfire In Bel glum. April 15, 1915. French carried with bayonet spur northeast of Notre Dame de Lo rette and gained in the Argonne. Germans repulsed French at Marcheville and elsewhere. Russians crushed Bavarians at tacking their left wing, and defeat ed Auatrians on extreme east. Austrians defeated Russians near Oiezkowice on the Biala. Allied battleships destroy Turk camp at Enos. Russian squadron bombarded Kara-Bo rnu. German submarine sank British steamer Ptarmigan. French airmen made several raids on German positions. April 15, 1915. French repulsed German attacks near Arras and St. Mihiel. Operations in Carpathians checked by flooded rivers. Great defeat of Turks at ShaiLa, Mesopotamia, by British reported. French cruiser bombarded El Arish, Palestine, and Russians shelled Asia Minor porta. Zeppelins raided East Kent, Es sex and Suffolk. Rhine towns raided by allied aeroplanes. Two allied hydroplanes shot down by Turks at Dardanelles. THINGS YOU MAY NOT KNOW A Swiss aviator rose to the helgli oI 19,800 feet, overtopping the beg previous ascent. The United States produced 6B.:i per cent of the 400,483,489 barrels o petroleum that entered the market of the world In 1914. A lightning bolt at Laurel. Del ?truck a half-grown chicken am ?tripped it as clean of feathers as new-laid egg, leaving the bird none th worse for t?e experience except fo lack of covering. An Oregon man has developed motor-driven machine for cleanln fruit and sorting it into ten grades a a rate of more than 17,000 pieces a hour. Apology Due. A certain weekly says: "We wisl to apologize to Mrs Orlando Overlook la our paper last week we had as i heading, 'Mrs. Overlook's Big Feet The word we ought to have used is i French word pronounced the same but spelled fete. It means a celebrs Don and Is considered a very ton word."?Brooklyn Basle. , ] t' ' j i , BALKED BY MIRAGE i ^ 'British Artillery Has Queer Trou ble in Arabia. t evolution* of Troop* Ar* Obscured? 8*0 Infantry Llko Troo* Moving and Think Them ? Trans- ^ port Train. Sheikh Saad, Arabia.?The (round etweeu the Tigris river and the hills was the scene of the battle of Sheikh Saad. The land la maliciously and I fanatically sterile. Even the agoon and the kharnoog come to an end. It was over this rutty ground that the transport wagons bumped and jolted with their freight of wounded on the evening of January 7 It was evening when our steamer moored near the battlefield. We went out to meet them as they streamed In over the mud-colored flat, and gave what aid we could. Many were walk ing very erect, some of them with the stillness of effort These were the less Serious cases. The stretchers and transport wagons came In later. One was struck with the hardiness and atolclsm of the British and Indian alike. "Beg your pardon, sir," says a Brit ish private; "can you tell me where the ambulance Is?" and he deprecates the support of my shoulder, though his calf Is bandaged and It la painful for him to put his left foot to the ground. "I am all right, sir; It's nothing seri ous." He lifts up bis shirt and points to a puncture In his stomach. His face Is bloody and bandaged. "It is nothing," he explains; "took off a bit of ;ay gums." ? He will w>t rest, but moves on to wards the c-latant Red Cross flag and the funnels of the steamer on the riv er. Here al least should be rest, warm tea and comforts tor his wounds. But In Mesopotamia It Is a tar cry to the gmooth motor ambulances of France, the rapid transit to the hospital, where : an hour ot two after he has received i first aid dcctors and nurses are ready with every saving device that science can provide. We have heard the guns overnight and again In the morning as our pad : die steam ir with Its attendant llght ! era forged up stream. The first shell ! disturbed a flight of sand grouse which 1 came wheeling across the river In such myriads that we who were watching from the root of the bridge forgot tne sheila and turned our glasses on the birds?a skein of plumage half a mile long tying itself up In loops In the most complicated evolutions, the van suddenly wheeling around, while the rear, an opposite point, then converged In a hocp. They were dark at one turn, silvery the next, as the sun caught their underwlngs through the black smoke of aSpionltor. The evolutions of our troops on land were obscured by the mirage. We saw Inftntry like trees moving, and thought them a transport train. Other masses, which could be nothing but artillery, crossed the pontoon bridge ahead ot us from the right bank to the left. Tlte m'lrage does not affect the atmosphere at the height of a bursting shell; we could see the shrapnel smoke unfolding two or three miles from the bank, an.l wondered If It were Turkish artillery or our own "Shelling their advance posts" was the general ver dict. It was not until later that we realized that the whole force was at grips with the enemy; and it was not until we moored and met the converg ing stream coming In from the trenches that we realized how costly the day had been. The guns we had heard had played but a small part in the action, for the mirage had made artillery preparation for our advance ineffectual, and the bulk of our casual ties on both banks of the stream had occurred In frontal attacks on the en emy's position. As I write we are moving on to at tack a new position, and It Is not the moment yet for a detailed account of the action, j FUNERAL WAITS FOR COFFIN 8ha and Her Hueband Selected Wal nut Lumber From Their Farm, but There Waa Delay. St. Louis.?The funeral of Mrs. An ,on Wetneke of Edwaruavllle, 111., was delayed until a coffin could be made ! from a walnut tree of her "home ! place." I Mrs. Wleneck? and her husband, oree years ago, picked out the wal I nut tree on tbelr farm from which to have their coffins made. It was sawed I Into.boards, which we^e permitted to [ season until last June, when Wteneke took the lumber to a planing mill and | ordered It made into coffins. Wleneke was then eighty years old, i and his wife wan seventy-seven. The work of making the caskets . was put off. When Mrs. WTeneke died, rather unezpectedly, orders were j given to rush one of the collns to i completion. I 1 Mrs. Wleneke was the daughter of t Anton Louis, a pioneer St. Louis drug gist. E j ? I | Finds Coin Minted In t790. ( Fredericksburg. Tex.?Arthur Kue ! lernann found a silver coin on his lot here which was found to have been t j minted In 1790 under Francis II, em E j pervr of Germany, king of lloliemla I ! and Hungary. The coin Is the size of i1 a stiver dollar and in a fair state of j preservation. 1 | ?????'?-?^ W 1 ? ' ' 1.1.. . .... ^ | TO HAVE HIS HEART'S WISH John Drtscoll of Hampton, Va., la the laat survivor of the old U. 8. 8. Monitor, conqueror of the Menimae in the Civil war. After the famous naval battle President Lincoln sum moned the Monitor's crew to Washing ton and told them If anyone ever want ed a favor It would only be necessary to ask It. Driscoll, now seventy-six. never asked anything of the United States until recently, when he told the navy department a trip through the Panama canal on a warship before he died would make him happy. The promise will be made good and he will sail on the next ship to make the pas sage. GETS SCARE 0F HIS LIFE Thought It a Skeleton Rattling, But It Waa Only Two Screech Owls. Falmouth, Ky.-J T. McNay of Short Creek had the scare of his life recently about It: SO o'clock at night. He thought his time had come when be waa awakened by what he thought was the rattling of a skeleton at the head of his bed. When he collected bis wits he found that It was two screech owls sitting on the head of bis bed cracking their jaws and making a lot of noise with their claws. When Mr. McNsy raised up out of bed to answer "the call" of old St. Pefer, as he thought it was, the two owls flew against the window. Then It was that Mr. McNay took a new lease on life, as he knew wnat It was. Mr. McNay says the owls were black with soot and he supposed that they were sitting on top of the chimney and got to fussing and fell down the chimney and Into the room. BLIND MAN OPERATES MILLS Although He Is Sightless, Wilder Runs Four iof Them Success fully. Wllllamsport, Pa.?Forced to sup port a family when he became blind fourteen years ago, at the age of forty two, O. L. Wilder, after taking a turn at various occupations, turned to mill ing. He ordered a feed mill Installed. With his hands he studied Its mys teries and soon started grinding. With his hands he built the bins and other equipment. Since then he has Installed three ad ditional mills. All of these he oper ates himself. He has not even pot guards on the swlft-runnlng belts. He bags and weighs all the flour, feed, meal and oyster shells he grinds, and loads his products on the patrons' j wagons. He also conducts a small grocery as a side Issue. Freak Chicken Dies. New* York.?A chicken equipped with four legs, four wings and two backs, was hatched by a hen belong ing to Fred Mohrmann, Brooklyn. The freak chicken died shortly after leav ing Its shell. Boy Falls Four Stories. New York.?Falling from the fourth story window of his home, Samuel Zacher. four, landed on a crate of eggs and only fractured his jaw. ' | BRIDE KILLED IN BATHTUB 11 Electric Lamp Fall* in Tub aa Wom an Read* and Charge* Water. t Toledo, O.?While Mra. Josephine , Bellows, twenty-two. was sitting. In a bathtub In her apartment and reading , a magazine as the tub was Riling, an , "iectrlc lamp toppled Into the tub. , '?rob# and eharged the water with elec ? Iclty. killing her instantly. Neighbors heard her scream, but , found the apartment locked. They no tified her father, who found hia daugh ter dead. The husband, Iter tram B. Ilellowa, to whom she Was married ten months ago, was on a train en route home from a business trip. Mrs. Bel lows was Miss Josephine Clapp, daugh ter of a retired merchant, and wM popular socially. A bathroom novelty Is a spring wire bracket to be clamped to a faucet, so shaped as to hold either a tumbler or a cake of soap securely. 1 ROMPS IN THE TRENCHES Wee Waif Is Adopted by British Soldiers. Little Girl Found In Firing Line Pfaye In Safety on Parapet?Sleepa Peacefully Amid Buratlng Bombs. London.?The story of how a little girl, found In the firing line, was adopt ed by a British regiment has been told by a soldier back from the front to a traveler who relates his experi ences in the Northampton Daily Echo. "About eight months ago," he said, "the company was trudging along for the first line of trenches when one of the men?his name was Philip Impey ?found the child In a ditch by the roadside. No one could go back, and the soldiers took the girl Into the trench and made her as comfortable as possible. In a few days she had re covered from the 111 effects of the wet and exposure and was running up and down the trench, the pet of all the offi cers and men. One day a bomb nearly filled In part of the trench. When the men had re covered from the shock the sergeant major asked a man to go and see that the child was safe. They had left her asleep In a snug corner, and there they found her, still sleeping. "The German trenches were about ISO yards off. and the level, open space between the two lines wasn't healthy. No man who valued his life would go there unnecessarily, or recklessly put his bead above the parapet. One morn ing, to their horror, the men, through the periscope, saw the child standing above the trench on the Oerman side. Cries came from the enemy, but they were not hostile. The sight of the fclrl, little more than an Infant, had touched their sentimental side, and she had offers of chocolates and Invitations to go and see them. "After that the girl went over the parapet quite often. She was as safe in that danger zone as if she had been behind the lines. No German would harm her, and once she went close up to their first line trench." < The eight days' trench duty ended, the little daughter of the company was taken back and was not allowed to get between the lines again. She was taken charge of by the company store keeper. who had children of his own and was mightily proud of his skill In dressing and undressing the child and his strictness about the morning bath. All the men made a fuss of her, and she of them. The boys In khaki are her playmates and she goes up to any Tommy with a smile of complete trust. A month after she was found the men thought that she ought to have a name. Philip Impey, who found her, was now dead and they gaVe her his Rtirname. with Phyllis as the nearest approach to Philip. After she had been six months with the company the ser geant major was wounded and came to a hospital in England. The girl came with him and stayed In the hos pital too, the pet of patients and nurses. She has now been taken by her adopted "daddy"?the sergeant major ?to Bedford, where she will have a woman's care and still be attached to the regiment. The parentage of the child and how she came to be deserted In the ditch at La Bassee remain an unsolved mys tery. She was too young to know her name or to give any account of her self. There Is a suggestion of terror stricken flight in the fact that she Is afraid of a German helmet. For the khaki and becapped soldier she has an affection, but If a Tommy puts a hel met on she shrinks away as In fear. IS SHAVED BY AUTO LIGHT ?? Son Puts Machine Where Barber Can Work on Father Vifho Is In a Hurry. Clayton, Mo.?Heroic measures were resorted to In order that Frank Tege thoff. a real estate dealer, could ba shaved In time to catch a train one night recently. Tegethoff had but a short time In which to make the train and rushed Into one of Clayton's bar ber shops and demanded a hasty "once over." While the barber was engaged In daubing Tegethoff's face with lather the electric lights failed and the proc ess had to be stopped. It was up to Tegethoff's son, Leo, to supply the light. He drove his father's automobile on to the sidewalk in front of the shop and stopped In a position which threw the rays of the headlight on the elder Tegethoff's face and the shavlni op eration was completed. Tegethoff caught the train. FREE CONVICTS ARE FLUSH Fifteen Men Out of Prison Had Little Roll of $704 Be tween Them. Olympia, Wash?Instead of the usual prison gift of $5 each, 15 In mates of the state penitentiary at Walla Walla took away with them a total of $704, earned In "ages, when released recently. The leading capitalist of the crowd carried $92.70, the next $85.10, six had cash varying from $60 to $80 each, and the lowest, $15.80, all earned at the rate of 50 cents a day and board on public road work In Douglas county. Another detachment of 30 men has been ordered from the prison to the honor camp, which will close on com pletion of work In that section of the state July 1. Twenty prisoners havs been selected to be sent April 1 to the Mesklll quarry In Lewis county. Saved by Snow In Well. Wlthrow, Wash.?Falling 35 feet In a well, a valuable 1,300-pound horse belonging to Walter Nollmeyer was saved b? a heavy pack of snow at the bottom. Eight men with ropes and tackle tescued the animal. The horse was unfhjured. Pays MlMiers. Yonkers, N. Y.?Wlllara Oernhardt, a wholesale grocer, willed $3 to each of ths 150 members of his lodge who attended his funeral to reimburse fbr the loss of their day's oar. LATE NORTH CAROLINA MARKET v QUOTATIONS Westsrn Newspapsr Union Hews Servico Prices Paid by Merchants for Farm Products in the Markets of North Carolina as Reported to tha Division of Markets for the Weak Ending ' Saturday, April 1st. Ahoakia. Corn, 92c bu; oats, 60c bo; peas, 61.25 bu; Irish potatoes. $3.26 bbl; sweet potatoes, 76c bu; apples. 56 bu. Butter, Western 32c lb. N. C. 36c lb; eggs, 16c dot; spring chickens, 16c lb; bens, 10c lb. Cotton middling., 11 l-4c; cotton seed, 60c bu. Asheville. Corn, 90c bu; oata, 57c bu; peas, 6130 bu; soy beans. 61.36 bu; Irish potatoes. 62.70 bbl; sweet potatoes. 76c bu; apples. 65.25-66 bu. Eutter, Western 3?c lb; N. C. 37-38c lb; eggs, ld-llk^doz; spring chickens, 18-20c lb; hens. 12c lb. Charlotte. Corn. 90c bu; oats. 63c bu; peas. 51.60; soy beans, 61.60 bu; Irish pota toes, 53.25 bbl; sweet potatoes. 76c bu. M. C. butter, 30c lb; eggs, 20c doz; spring chickens. 26c lb; hens. 10-12c lb. ? Cotton, middling. 12c; cotton seed. 60c bu; lbs. of meal for ton of seed, 2000. Durham. Corn. 90c bu; oats, 68c bu; peas. 51.25 bu; Irish potatoes. 53 bb|; sweet potatoes. 61 bu; apples. 56.50 bbl. Butter. Western 35c lb. N. C.,' 30c lb; eggs. 16-17 l-2c doz; spring chickens. 20c lb; hens. 8e lb. Cotton, middling. 11 3-6c; cotton seed, 65c bu. Fayettevltle. Corn, 85c bu; oats, 65c bu; peas, 61 bu; Irish potatoes. 63.60 bbl; sweet potatoes, 75c bu; apples. 63.76 bbl. Butter, Western 30c lb, N. C. S5c lb; eggs, 16-17 1-2 doz; spring chickens. 20c lb; hens. 16c lb. Cotton, middling. 11 3-6c; cotton seed. 60c bu; lbs. of meal for ton of seed, 2200. Greenville. Corn. 80c bu; oats, 60c bu; peas, 6125 bu; soy beans. 61.60 bu; Irish potatoes $4 bbl; sweet potatoes, 76c bu. Butter. Western. 30c lb; eggs, 20c doz; spring chickens. 60c each; hens, 60c each. Cotton, middling, 11c; cotton seed. 60c bu. Hamlet. Com. 96c bu; oats, 05c bu; peas, 6115 bu; sweet potatoes. 75c bu. Butter, N. C., 32c lb; eggs. 20c doz; spring chickens. 15c lb; hens. 12c lb. Cotton, middling. 11 l-2c; cotton seed. 60c bu. High Point. Corn, 90c bu; OS's, 65c .bu; peas. 6160 bu; Irish potatoes. 53 bbl; sweet potatoes, 66c bu. Eggs. 16c doz; spring^tchlckens. 26c lb; hens. 11c lb. Lumberton. Corn,4K)c bu; sweet potatoes, 50c bu Butter, Western, ,35c lb; eggs. 20c dot. Cotton, middling. 11 l-2c. Maxton. Cora. 90c bu; oats. 60c bu; peas, 61 bu; soy beans. 61.60 bu; sweet pota toes. 60c bu. Butter, western. 35c lb; N. C. 36c lb; eggs.~16c doz; spring chickens, 16c lb; hens, 12c lb. Cotton, middling, ' 11 l-2c; . cotton seed. 60c bu; lbs. of meal for ton of seed. 2000. Cincinnati 8west potatoes, 62-62-26 bbl. % Monro*. Cron, 96c bu; oota, 60c bu; pens, 91 bu; sor beans. $1.50 bu; Irish pota toes, $6.60 bbl; sweet potatoes. 76c bu Butter. N. C.. 30c lb; eggs. 16c dot; spring chickens. 36c each; hens. 46c each. Cotton, middling, 11 l-4c; cotton seed. 60c bu. New Bern. Corn, 36c bu; oat*. 60c bu; peas $1.15 bu; soy beans, $1.20 bu; Irish bu. potatoes. $3.60 bbl; sweet potatoes. $6c Eggs. 16 20c dot. Cotton, middling. 11 l-2c; cotton seed. 60c bu; lbs. ot meal for ton of seed. 2000. Raleigh. Corn. 88c bo; oats, 66c bu: pess. $1.15 bu; to^ beans. $1.25 bu; Irish potatoes, $3.26 bbl; sweet potatoes,~80c bu; apples, $4.60 bbl. Butter, Western 34c lb, N. C. 33c lb; eggs. 17 l-2c dot; spring chickens. 26c lb; hens. 14c lb. Scotland Neck. Corn, 00c bu; oats, 55c bu; peas. $1.50 bu; soy beans. $1.60 bu; Irish potatoes. $3.25 bbl; sweet potatoes. 75c bu. Butter. Western S5c lb, N. C. 36c lb; eggs, 16c dot; spring chickens, 17 l-2c lb; hens, 12c lb Cotton, middling,, 11 l-8c; cotton seed. 66c bu. * Winston-Salem. Corn, 76c bu; oats, 65c bu; peas. $1 bu; soy beans, $1.60 bu; Irish pota toes, $2.75 bbl; sweet potatoes. 60c bu; | apples, $3.50 bbl. Butter, N. C.. 32Mb; eggs, 17t dot; spring chickens, 20c lb; hens, 13c lb. Norfolk, Va. Cotton, middling. 11 ll-16c. Chicago. No. 2 white corn, 71 3-4-75 l-4c (de livered In Raleigh. 86 3-4 90 l-4c) No. 2 yellow corn, 75-80 l-2c (delivered In Raleigh 90-95 l-2c). Butter, 28 1-2-36C (creamery); eggs, 19-20c (firsts). New York Sweet potatoes. 40-80c basket. Butter, 36 l-4-38c (extra); eggs, 22 l-2-23c (extra fine). * Washington Sweet potatoes, $2-82.25 bbl. N. C. MARKETS. APRIL 4. 1 I "uoiocn number." The "Golden Number," held of ao high Importance by eclentlsts and aootbaayers of olden tlmee. date* back to Melon, an Athenian astrologer, about 430 year* B. C. To And the gold en number, add one to the date and divide by It. the number of years In the moon's cycle. The quotient la the number of cycles stnoe the Christian era and the remainder la the guides nurnner. Muddy Missouri River. The Missouri la the muddirst rive) in the Mississippi valley; It carries more slit than any other large rlvwr In the United States ez.-ept possibly the Rio Grande and the Colorado. For every square mile of country drained It carries downstream 131 tons of die solved and suspended matter eacl year. ?r ? There With the Explanation. Mother (who pays the bills)?"What are all these charges on the Country club bill?To Tom Collins'.'" "That's all tight, mother. He?be s my caddy." ?Life. City's Distinction. Bnenos Aires Is the largest city la the world south of the equator. -r-' Does Away With Misdeals. A Frenchman has Invented a ma chine for dealing cards that Is said to make misdeals Impossible. Somebody Would Laugh. "Bare, Oi*ll write me name on the back o' your note, gnaranteetn' yeTl pay nt." said Pat. smiling pleasantly na he endorsed Billup'e note, "but Oi know domned well ye won't pay nt Weil have a laugh-at tb' lxplnee aI the bank."?Life. But They Don't Remember. -Mobbe." said Uncle Ebon, "si everybody could remember dat every body suffers fum de heat same as everybody else, a hot wave wouldn't be de elgnal foh everybody to make hlaae'f more or less disagreeable." , Try it yourself? if you want personal and poeitive infor mation as to how delightful Prince Albert really is, smoked in a jimmy pipe or rolled into thebestmakin'a cigarette you ever set-fire-to I For, Prince Albert has a wonderful message of pipe-peace and makin's peace for every man. It will revolutionize your smoke ideas and ideals. The patented process fixes that?and cuts out bite and parch I L NtlNCE Albert the national joy tmoke is so friendly to your tongue and taste that it is mighty easy to get acquainted with. YouH like every pipeful or cigarette better than the last because it is so cool and fragrant and long-burning. You'll just sit back and ponder why you have kept away from such joy*us smokings for so long a time I Men, we tell you Prince Albert is all we claim for it You'll understand just how different our patented process makes Prince Albert quick as you smoke it 1 Bey Prince Atkert everywhere tehacee la aM t in 3 eryeimi-mimoe kmmidere mi?k ammmeo^moiatemer tape thmt hemp the tehmeem im R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WiartM-Seka, N. C \ mm tmakU MM| ?Sm ^msss ??!-??--s??? YOUR AD In This Space i Your Busir ess ? ** - Will Increase
The News-Herald (Ahoskie, N.C.)
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April 14, 1916, edition 1
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