Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Oct. 22, 1924, edition 1 / Page 3
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I^ SSKe Found tile What ,, "F\c 1 , It.n. A. L. Hall-Quest of Cincinnati-' ftswer. She has gone on record as dart. Her husband, Professor at Pit M-r plea for freedom, suppressed "his p or divorce attempted to shield the "oi tie. Maj. Hart's wife then divorced h i' ie realized. FKKM BOYS AND GIR1-S U K' j, ~ WIN PRAISE AT FAIR K jRiiieigh, N. C. Oct. 20?The forty club boys and fifty club girls j\ K|j^ ?hd demonstrations at the North Carolina .State Fair last week -.von match praise for the noteworthy man- an n?r in which they perfoipied their pu \ dities. ' ce t, JThe girls had charge cf small CI I. tqoths, one booth to each ieam. irt <kl 1 l|fe Woman's Building and lave daily lV( E . ' ewnonsty-ations in how to make bet- 011 tcf clothing,how to prepare nutrit- J" iois bread, hbw to ntnke jelly aim I pre-esve*, hqw to handle fa. n poul- l-M try or candle and grade cjga and ,|i the other activities in which they tn arc engaged as cdnh menV;-.". >Tci' ih only did they, go through the op vt iotas with, the skill of the trained worker hut they were tiro able to 111 give the reasons th t oet3sior.c;i ^ each operation. Nor were they die- ,jl mayed by the questions which canf. jj, to them from every direction by the w; multitude of visitors. The boys had charge of 17 booth Pi in. the AgricultUj-al Building . They th told with ease how to prepare :i call *'' for the show ring,, jjow to fend anil r' judge swine, how to select seed corn jh how to grow more cotton to the acre or how to improve soils by 1 using' .soybeans and other logunw,They gr~ hrtd in their booths actual exhibits ((j of the calves, the swinef the poultry BJ and the improved modern devipes .for t handling these successfully. '''J These boys and girls v.-e those who to w^n out in county tstlesCl conducted ll by the farm and hbpte1 .afteffr*! #n4; 1 then later competed in district eon- wtests for the rightPtd cbme' M ftlf *. __ jJ- .1 ^ 111 omie THir as me ^presenianves OIJ ^ that district. Adequate prizes for |a the winnihg: teams were awarded by ju the fair management and privatf Bj organization*. -Th?*se young \ copte- et were guy-sts of .thfe. State. College w while in Raleigh and were teideredj n complimentary banquet on Wed-'J aI r.eiday night or Fair week. ? o- p| A WONDERFIT. co DICSOVERY " tr ' ' tr The remarkable herb 'HOBO' as. CI analyzed by 'Schwatz' was found lb contain besides other principles a ?* variety of acid which he named (W- | itannic Acid* He also found it to pJ . contain a peculiar acid discovered al by Schwartz and Rochleder and nan*.- |?| ed Ribichloric acid. This has been tli P" used In Dropsy congestion of the W spleen. Scrofula and Leprosy with f'r good results. In recent a hi: K;v herb ha bpe# discovered grow!ng it j R- East T xaa, I.ouisiana and fart?rj. R,- 00 experiment ha* shown that its won-i &'>* derfully purifying properties 'were | ( ??. due to its action on the kid hey a. " The H o Medicine Company. of t.;' Beaumont Texas, make an effective ol fe's balm from this* Korfci and call it Hobo' Kidney and Bladder ftarncsr!? w gfc.-. This balm befog :said 'o be a D'.i P< recti" Aperient amd AotT-s'cprb ui^ c?ix Bottles?guaranteed treaty ^ Pp;vment cofjtvfO.OO. . > ^ 1 0 T ? In To develops* mprket for roOt? and ?i bulbs, club women of BuncomW th l * tw.\,l n fl^wor ut r?n n r.f . ttic"hi-al!ing hotols in Ashville this fall. Many , fine varietie nf ilnhl- hfl ins and gladioli mere-shown-ami at- H gf. traded over a thousand visitors. '1 ? -"* ? t. Don't forget that the poultry K ne ds ui-yn !, 1 all wi'it a- 'any, |1( caution poultry workers of the Stato {J College'. of Agriculture. . vt r~? i ' lei fell' I Jr.-. no 1 mail" > on ihie_jrinm Hgtit' will protect the soil an add '.spfn- '1 * ' '? - ,-}vc. "lirodrn. ?ay .\gvono.?y v-oik|:;1 * ,T? of tht -Mtn College e?tension J ,i 1U..1 . It rare in aale.'untrl^;'- ft . .y.J ii - c,ir -.nt .'.l' n'sxt v ' ?: frfeo <*4 dj fcc ... . fimi'.,; l?if too t.adly for t to : .'a "" Yir.'P WW" s-, ; r 7 - . . .. a^.. ^ ?: T?~?; "Perfect Lover* W ttfL ' Mw ?^T5utST nation la watching tha former Chicago and Minnesota for tha having found It in MaJ. P. W. tsburgh University, listened te rimitiVe emotions and it) asking her mania" namtf for hie wfife'i j ha, ae the "perfect love'1 might ^fcSE OrSCOVERtU ILLINOIS, HE SAYS ?_ sserrts Orientals Painted *iasa Bird Centuries Ago. f Sprtngtlulil. 111.?Clilncse explorers.' legating Balboa, and perhaps CoMiin-j 5, discovered Illinois four or live*' Aldrles ago and Sfit lhe flag of (lie? ifnese empire on the cliffs' above i nm, he cord tog '10 t?. W. Pityne, a | a?'banker, who for many yenVs has \ iioi letl liotlan relics and studied the r!> history of the western heniK (icve. "When Bid lion rushed into the Pair. carrying flte P.ag of Spain. he dn'l have even- h druggist's prescrip a for one-half piur c^T-the water of e Sen," ISi.vne says. "At the .'Mine Columbus, discovered inorica, Cnhokla was probaiiiy the pilot of North America and the moM' iportant westorn city north of old exiviv It v.'us situated at the june;>d of the Illinois. Missouri and Kasiskin rivers A\ith the Mississippi and lis near ihe mouth of the Ohio. "Tlie country was thickly populated, mb.ahlv there wer?fmi many people In e country districts as there arei toly. The hluCre of the Mississippi vcr were used as a graveyard and the vstern const of the Americas was 1rkW settled from Alaska to l'uta oiu. - , i Old When Pyramids Were Built. "Baltriui livdd wttlt these people for ;o years and wps told again and ffcthi abdut. the Pifciflc. Finally, with! >guard of 130. Indians he ventured to? tuts n?e divide unci claim the Paclfle r Spain*. f " As he did it, he was standing over t^iftr^>/^'ern old'frhen the pyramids ?re byflt. If lie li'ad been attending* *>igdeagG?'fcaliJK?fue today he wonld ive drawn a sea^ in the grass in; ont of the 'bluchers. He was ther st one through the gate. The Pacific} id been discovered and rediscovered ;ain and again before he anrhed. nnd rery island in It* Of nnj* Importance ns Inhabited. ' "Before Balhoa reached the Pacific id probably, about the time that Oombus was landing on the eastern ex-* ernity of North America, Chinese exorers -arrived nt the west* const of the untry, and, following the best marked alls, the Platte trail and the Clat*f ail, which was centuries old before ' lark ever saw It, they penetrated to ie Mississippi river nnd the capital ' the continent at Cuhokia. "Like CoMimblis nnd Balhoa they j aimed the country, and in doing so ' aced the Chinese flag on the cllifs | Alton. Tills whs later known as the ; iasn bird. Superficial examination of ie painting.shows that it is undoubt- [ fly a Chinese dragon, the national nlilepj of the empireProbably Never Returned Home. I "In tindays there were po after- j >-n edition.. It is doubtful If any j u- in .China -knew what the hardy ; ; pi others were about. They "way have j in nn r.il'efu of a crew o/.j Chinese; rules, or they may have been adven , ii'erif U*ho. ?".1ied into unknown seas ; it of cilffosity, vi'urthcn.jore, in thojsjf <!ayr- travel n*-?o-ditiieult. that jdtfiieers never ex>? !ed/td return tO'dlielr homes." The itr; ppan < xphftvfs returned to report tludf-but the Chinese prob djr carried nil they owned wbli tItcTu. v isluitypobab^e.that tllby'i ever re-j rnad, tyr* tlmr their dj*^?very was nnnrmru ed. only the pfllfifcm: Mj e dragon^sfru: Piasa hird, remained to j H of their Journey. ''I'lifi time of this exploration is very ! trd to fix. Limestone weathers easily,' ul, ni ibe dragon could still- lie seen j > years ago, it Koems improbable that j ....ir ixmuic'I 1TIVTO lllUU liVC tCUirlos ?igo. -r 'The theory that the dragon was tinted by aborigines of Oriental stock not tenable as it could not have surv, i op thtf gift* that long. There no doubt In invmtnd that ir was dnfyd by-the ClnTT^Si,' explore ralAvlio . H?e ?r ~iT~Tf?iH?nt - ?lato. fiiktoT'caUy e.-klng." ' ; | The Plaaa birth whigft"1* supposed to ?V{ hern seen for the.jlrst ttine',by a h(fO ensth wbed JOllM floated <ibtn> U ft j? tafr Cenlvirh'K one. 1 111c- uiOst tuysfcrioiis. of fha-Kjiir'ii , fc\\;ings, or [lelroj^yidiH, h^Afh^Tea. r'WhV'lgataldd' 'fltwgy ^, t}a.4 :> i'. mtViMto uadths ortitloaL Vis li .?. T rt Fo'rcade; n tnenribef < I?on-boy -seouts,-Is now-im'-poriVvs! toi -tln-.:t|ratcdn-(>Tl ?he cliffs. A'bv j , " T~. " - * ?> ?? TPH&ROXBOROCOt^Ef^C?rt 10-YEAR-0LD PANAMA CANAL PASSES SUEZ ^C' * World'. Greatest Artificial Interoceanic Waterway. Washington.?"Ten years old In August, the Panama canal Is audi a lusty < youngster that already It la outgrowing Its original clothes and baa Uncle Rom wondering If tt wSI need larger garmeata " ,1. "In truffle handled It' hns passed mlilille-aeed, flfty-flve-year-old Sues canul and Is now the world's greatest urtillcial Interoceanh; waterway. "At the present rate of traffld/ growth the canal will bare to t>e greatIj( enlarged before It Is three decades Ctpjerttt IMMn' iipaa n I. "Such Is u thumb-nail sketch of Lhe accomplishments of America's "Big ttllch' o'n~t heeVe* of "Its second detv nde," says a bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the National Olographic society. The waterway ?sts formally opened to .the world Aaggst 15. 1914.' 'The Panama.-' .canal's birthday ' achievement ^vetf-the Ufflted Fh-nteS flie proprietorship of the two busiest canals in the world, the Pnnama and tlje Snttlt Ste. Marie," continues the: b^lletUf; ^Thc? latter stilt hontjl/es l.'lco as ranch irutlic a? tbq Piine.dm cgnal, although tt Is'open only eight njonths of tlie year. ' "Ptumipg canal's 'teh'yeif'r' record reads like thc stnry .of the Traditional, Ainerlcnn buy. l-lslntr from noverty to \walth. It is n record- of flnhnfclftl success beyond the dreams of many of tts stnnchest adherents; It Is a record of service success; It is a triumph of-sanitation; It Is, ns Viscount Bryce predicted. 'The greatest engineering achievement of history or of prospifct/ In 1023 canal tolls totaled more t than $17,000,000 against expenses of j $4317,000, a net profit eqanl to more , than 3.5 per cent of the construction j tfost of the canal, $375;000.000. In i 1923 nearly 4,000 vessels passed from j ocean to ocean.- But tlie fiscal year 1 of 1924 far outstriped 1023. Of the! 107,000,000 cargo tons transferred In 1 the decade, more thnn a fourth Is! credited to 1924 and the tolls rose to ; $24,290,000. Expenditure figures are' not yet available. Canal Gets Birthday Gift. j "President Coolhlge recently gave the deserving Panama canal a birthday present; an executive order putting aside 22 square miles of additional country for the Canal Zone. This acquisition will be converted Into a- lurge reservoir to save up the i Oingres floods which would otherwise CP over.the Oaten data spillway^| "The new AlliaJueJa project wM! ferther Increase, the size of Gntun lake, which Is. already ahe largest artificial body of water in the world. "Ever since the Panama canal was proposed predictions of Its great boon t<i trade hqv^ jirfcs* > | yfars show what the can'ai Is good Tfqr. Oil Is king at Pnnama today, the figures show. The tonnage of oils, chiefly crude and refined petroleum. Passing through from the Pacific to 1 he Atlantic exceeds the total of all other products. j "From the United States' industrial East the Iron and steel comes and thou-1 sands of tons of other manufactured products and .textiles fQr South Amerirn, Australasia; and the Fur East' | From there also, come at the rate of more than 100,000 tons In one year, i ammonia, cotton, sulphur, cement,! |coal and coke, metals', ores and paper.) "In the United States the great argument for the Panama canal, after its necessity for defense, was Its advantage to coastwise traffic Ten years show that the 'Rig Ditch' fulfills these expectations. Two-thirds of east-hound tonnage from all sources is coastwise traffle,' Of the tonnage j originating in west-const states, 90f per cent is consigned to enst-const < ports. Half of the shipments from the industrial Kn^jt totaling one-third of i nil west-hound traffic Is coastal traffic.1 -California sends millions of barrels of oil oust via the canal. Much of her fruit in cold storage moves this way anil from the northern part of the const conies the famous salmon. Lumber is a commodity of rapidly frtcreas- , liitf importance in canal business, th? cast const exchanging its particular ; t.tfpos oT wood for the west coast's native trees. Wheat from western Can adn instead of flowing to Europe by i the lukes Hiid rivers of the St. Lawrence system, goes to Vancouver now And is shipped to England -via Colon, i All Kinds of Odors. ' | | "AH, the odors, scents and smells rising. _fr<>m a rrn\>ded Far East port! Cjfrtnotv twitch those Vat Panama- Tank ! ors with blood fronn South America, ' camphor from .lupifm algaroblllft from Andes forests, garlic, dttilrV causta and ! 1 whale [oils' from .'the Knr-HEiuiL Iodine fnbtii, Chile, .perfume from France, onions from < 'alifoinia, . peauUtq and ; ten from Clhnn. ruhtyr fruro< i ipore. eonra from the South seas, and ' jp\niirent adiiuonln^f/otH .Brilllumrg, all j mix at Panama. Rut probably ??<> port In ..Ar'thy dissipate* its sfdhclies ; . llUA; Itll .L5ionl? 1?? cII11 N .. .... ' t'fltMil ^nnp. fr-iiti II iiv ' :on?$?ift fV? i rfsruhul jin?V foti (he fViiihhi'jrh. j* fiK ?<j?<T!hFs sinrt i tvftr f*wtvn nn ctif?i.?T' | "]n t.fn. .vfni'ri- .Wre ihfm ' sMp?i tiuve We/J tf\p :Vapa|. Thexu } i. .. .. 4.' > \ , 'V " g MO"; a .cln.i omntf 4?i rtftiM 'rfmn wU-T f> -irrl;. t ' .[ ;tinti rest r Ml f-w rrfT'-. -if ;\ T ;i %htr iibw-? t j i.-i fbrtgh "tl;e < r.rtiil ' V?ni) eneh ' '" - , r . -H i tbor >2. 1924 ' ' r--1 ^flary G ' 11.'i ) .'i' " 'i't i' ui j - : SOMA'S MONKEY ACTING Bhmit.-the < lilniiMinxee. hud been hav fft, a. I*#* nic? t-lsu#. . He hud own ' plnylng 'l'luut-foi< "\All (ti e - p I r ? ?- a [4 M!R" /(?' T^"'1 e keeper, nBK&L ' 1LA ' played Hint ganuffl ' , with him. He liked ' VO^Tl ,bp *" W*WFtlt?tl.'' A \ AyrW^^\ J wa8 alwnys fond ^ of tile straw game. "tie liked to huv?* I'* back scratched. ?feftV fith >t piece ofj ??ii 8trnw un<1 each* the pcrsoui JSBsW lVA? ?VBS ruljhln>!?i ^Idf pack would? >-i>(V srbp >Vindy would* Boma Would l,ami oot. nnothorj Hunt. il!T7JS r1r?-U3V Sl'lThtat ph . ?,iise?l it'iJvAWtfto here's nm.(U** ,.?y foBv?u." W V ' RUmttnrluHuni hythe kfccpel to hunt,' for the piece of string. And Bomol lyojrhf jtiint-lfo/'jtt% lr$er<V?jil4 puU theWhi*H\v:\.v jwnd ttustythat wn'y. Theft WtA?pe^ \>Hdi}d??*y : 1 ' ' ,5 V*rrj( over h?rre, Brinni," and Boning would walk over to another part of his' grep.t cage and. look again. Tl D the keeper would say: "Think, Biunn, what would he a good hiding iriace?" Then Boma wdifhl stop and his fore- j Head (tuid wrir.kit! tip and he would Souk from side to side as Though to I :.?y: j * Now let me think for a moment." j Then he would start looking for the I airing again. 'uictiiuek the keeper woi^ld say: "Now ybp're nearer It." and Botun would loOk very hard about tllnt spot. lie had just. been play in" . oil. with the keeper. He hrd V- rnOh , about and bad done Flie different ( thlpgf the keeper had told hi <# to do. He had often swinging and leaping 1 and doing his fine circus tricks and 1 when the keeper hud said: "Now hurry off' to bed/' he hud ( ru>hed tip to his bed which' was-.built1] up quite high in his cage and which, too, was covered with straw. . The people had all thought it whs wonderful the way lie had understood; what had been said to him and that . he fcid cashed a phut tp *}<r these- trick,*! heh easily and Wr.elv hV being,told, Ini a low voice, to dpjtlteixl! / V I Ci j /' Alter a ilme hfe ${e*r ticed/of /hpse? fricks. 'lie r?it ne .tijopgli Vft /uausts do more to nltifecti tile/ tuteijiion of* the crowd who were watching him. ?? oe got jn jront <* tiieai.apa nej begnri ' i*s Hitnke finny - faces: * H?| wriggled up his face on one side andthen on the other, and he made &1B sorts of funny faces. How the people did laafcli at hlm.j Homa was drth-hted. lie kept on. ilobig-more ami more of this and his f?V? lo?4ked too aUsyrd for. word*. Then the keeper spoke to him. "Hqtatt," he sdlfl, "'the people don't think yon're being dever now. They're only laughing at you. "It Is not .because t\ley think you are. smart. it is simply because you are so foolish that they are laughing. "Don't iimbi! a monkey-of yourself, i Bbmi" Now Roniar U ls? true, belonged to the monkey faintly, hut he knew that when the keeper said, "Don't make. Vij I a monkey of your- ^giv^L . | self." It meant iSi \??,yft that he was only H acting In a silly, U 11 slily way. ?' jk I Maybe it was H rV ^ *3 j a funny speech to K, make to a chltn* | pan zee, a meuiher j of the inopkey Vm I [family, but Boitoa (j^ ! understood it; 4(L All of a .sudden he Hopped mak- i : i faces, he stepped making n . ..r.TV-, of himself i hIb ; Ha<i Been iin.l Mill. i. great Swinging. ! rush he hud Inrr ried hack to. his bed ?>f struw in the corner <>f pis cage and had hidden his head fn sh'niheAfter a'time he came forth again bind did line tricks and leaped trboflt -gaily and had a beautiful time hut he didn't. "make a monkey of - hhnselfvI, again?not for some time anyway. a*j he didn't wont to.be laughed at Ij^j J viKiinih i N"f>, he ?1 i<In"t want that at all. and i tin* k?vner gfldattood that. ltmiia' AvaiM?a His 'Wtik-m' toai' j Ha illriu'i want them to think he wV >iild' nuike u imonkey oK hfcimelCP 'Ml ? i? Th* Root* of All Evil ' 1 Little llo^*?DMdy, the tetwher > *ii-l ' thiit .1 Av3? liiet like a 4H?fe<tr*e. irftm - \ rtKht? . /' Tiitl ; ;Yefe, h?y b<?y. the . tmnr' ty-fivlfnfnfhlF. ?r *- ** ! !*!. tin i.,_ whrrap axai\ -.t-Trrra * . . | Wornit Not Derived ?Miiltiei?ijriti-nin I ti n Ihtiitoiiilin-, Pit t,lfr "Wy hlr.l. thii' SJtts the jretm. : i::-i' rtyj#Let . >wneVni LtuUi.t Jiu a ~ ., . , ' ' | ; \ * *-T i? ? ? DR" S. RAPPORT of Durham I will be itt/Rax bare at DAVIS DKCdi STOKE every first W ednesday in each < month to cxr-nine rye* and fit elate ' tt. When he n'te ycu ?i.h {Usees jim have thesathfdctiun Ot knowing the/ ' re'correct. ; j/,. J L ' TO SEE BETTOR SEE MR. ' ;! My itt-'.r Vl4( will bo Wednesday. ]i jvV'cdpofdfiy, No'a.. Gils. !;r, ij j '! i 1 . I . a~?- r .n . i Hall's Catarrh Medicine ;Si!??j lid your ayarem of Catarrh or Oeafocai 1 caused by Catavrh. ' Said ty Jmitut! (k o*er 40 yyctt E. J. CHENEY & op.. Toledo. Otic > i , . !<' RIB , EB \ Money ba? k without (juration \ ' h i li.iTllfTfVltWrtWTOr1fti^ IDreHA8B, kkkhdiks / Yt th? treatment of Itch. Rcietna, V* I A Rinieorm.Tfc%ter or oth?Htch. * * inir akin dtimct. Try thie treatment at Out ritt. DAVIS DRUG COMPANY: t - ill RoXbaro, N. C. SKJiESTERSf ILLS DIAMOND r-PA"r' nDJT 00 \fe. j$ *!i* I. MOTS ! ?-r j\lV roar Uruj-vtst. for CHI-CRRR-THR fl A DIAMOND I?KAN1> PILXS iil ttl?l>^d/A Goto rictal ie t>e*e*. periled rrvth IttftvO) Ribbon. Tack ho orac^. Bv ?f ro#rV/ Jlrujprfgft *u<J ftik fi.r ClII-CtiLft TEK .4 V , iliA 'JOM) nu/ h !? PI I.X.B, tor tfrcittT-fivo year* regarded r.$ Co t.Sa(c. l, AWnya RinqU-i SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS., ? EVERYVVKFUE v' ] Old Folks' S I Ailments "I began taking Black- at ' Draught ever fifty years ago JD 1 ^ and my experience with it BP stretches over a good long i time," saya Mr. Joe A. .Blske- W , ai more, a Civil War veteran Hp ? and former Virginian, who is Ob 5 now a prominent citiaen of 5 4B Floyd. Texaa. "It la the Met H? JH laxative I know of for hM n people... A good many yeafe * ago, in Virginia, I used to 9 S gtt bilious and! found that ^ S Bedford's 5 Mfl ni Ann nDAllfiUT oUM'iJHAUbtl I ^neYl^ef^e^-ff 2 to Texaa I have these bilioul 9 , Ithat a little .Black-Draught BP soon straightens roe out. H| After a few doses, in little or I no time I'm all right again." BP ! dB Thedford's Risck-Diuught dga is a purely vegetable liver g& | medicine, used in America for 4B over eighty years. It act3 on BP an the stomach, liver and boa-els gm in a gentle,, natural way, as- j!? H sistiug digestion and relic.V- SEP djjj ing constipation. Sold every- jgp 22 where. ^2, PS E-102 HP /.v.; ..^ .. '>* : 1 ' ii .fciMHijy vwt^?ar-*xrf ?v *>.?w 0. 1.H4 i. m. p, m. ., p. .a. p. m. '7:06;*/6tl0.1vi DortialiiAiv* 11:33^3:30 ?. ra.|p. ....,, ,i ,-m. J 8;15| 6:20 hr. Uoxbor* *r, I9:t9| 7:19 8:45 G:50 lv. Pennistun ar. 11:50 0:53 9:05,7:13 lv. S. Boston ar. 11:30' 0:30 . \ 9:19:7:27 lv, Halifax ar. ll;jL?r 0:13 ' 11:4019:45 ar." Lynchg . tv. 9:0^ 4:00 3 Above train* "dally. Connections at Lynchburg for Wash ington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and N'ejv York; 4 -mM Parlor and sleeping, ears diUtng :ars. TJie best route to the west and northwest. Rates and inform s?a. apon apOhration to agent, or . W. C SAUNDERS, /' i If 'General Pass. Agent Roanoke. Va. \;:1 HOWlcTOBjlRElT COLDS ADD THE FLO Vt'tTi V<>'? -*?11 , ,Tp c " short an'attack of grippe, MUifafiif^.or, ay throat, phyriciim aw'jiugg&fca1 art? ffw recoflunondin^ CaUn^^s,tt H? .jjE'-iroaU^ C^fooiot tabfcl, that la'purilied from it in- % f&tom .u.,1 fJokfcning'cHbrt*/* v-o** ' .v"? h^ve. Jj yiy fbfi ii eel * iJVflJnRwky^jir frs far more eflectiffe ilnd certain lhaja tuA nfrj Hvlc c4!oriel.''h?^r?#6fdre- r^domtttdi f^ri' P f * ? chu* r * Ca'otnb* at b?H *fijc .. ? ': * atwkllovr -of Wat'e-r/^tHHY ci*. 1 *' .> . PS>RfpUfffe npr > kit???S" rp#r \ i/h ?at'jng; u rk < ; * ! fnfly<*ft"OoM- lift9 'eft4'^%'lr'' ."Vr-; ?*?f-;f?-icfrflUiei ?nd |K0rtE:H;* nre said only in r.rifiy-1 r ? >.Phi v . ":jS pW t -., , ; r.-; *nt trtff ihirtjSfivo ceilts. for lit* IsxvrJrpilv pstr*c? . -j lijje. Txrrr ,7. tended .s.tl gi? J hy 5 - -. ' r *.- w lv k i. v.-- cj : ' . ':e ec\. FOR O VER ' ZOO TEARS' !*aarlem oil has keen n .rtcr ! wide remedy for kidney, 11 vdr.r.jd 1 bladder disorders. rheumatic, lumbago and uric acid coatRtfc-.-. j. goiRKiEllg* *** HAARLEM OIL correct internal-trouble*. rtiir.uWtc vl t iK organ a Three sisea. All druggists. louTy cn the original geckifte Ootri Mcb* ,v ~ > * , r V ." " ' a tgr^?|: r. j,, every meal' ~ ISfvUrJ! '?.t altBiUu* lvS> I*p *?*. W 1 Ul'jjH ute dlgtfllaa. . SfOj. H y??r If relieves IMfM^kc'ltel alter hearty taOaf. n i a 11 MtMYi ra I h " aV .vIv^ '* _____ ?- .^ ' -?
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 22, 1924, edition 1
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