Newspapers / The Burnsville Eagle (Burnsville, … / April 1, 1932, edition 1 / Page 4
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vandals wonr sole Pr WRECKERS OF ROME An unanticipated by-product of the wholesale excavations undertaken In Rome by order of Mussolini has been - W dear the barbarian Invaders at much of the stigma formerly at tached to name. Aa a resul?of the discoveries In the vicinity of Trajan’s forum, Corado Rlcco,- direc tor of excavations, has formulated the conclusion that earthquakes, In ternal strife, sheer -carelessness and indifference wrought far more de struction in ancient Rome than did the barbarians. , /, One of the. latest discoveries is a long colonnade of heavy plliars all toppled, leaning agnlnj&t each other lika tt'fc. bent by a strong wind. Their, dt '(traction was not due ,o hu man vam. its, hot was traced to ah earthquake in 801, when the city was , under the papal rule of Pope Leo 111. As the excavations have revealed in creasing evidence that the barbarians were maligned, the director’s work has Intensified their study of the old historical records and they have beep able to demonstrate that many build ings and temples supposedly de stroyed In the “sack” of the city, were standing long after the last bar barian departed. . >— \ • Much of the bad name of the bnr — barlaha may be due to the prejudiced ! reporting by the early . Christians, who, as was amply demonstrated In the reports of persecutions under the empire, never let accuracy stand in the way of . giving their, enemies a l>aU name. Even without support from the most unprejudiced records to be found the archeologists in charge of the present work have be come convinced by the massive size of the structure-uncovered that the destruetjon of buildings by the' in vading armies was out of the ques tion—Washington Star. Double Purpose Served in Odd Statue Designs On a nobleman’s estate in Silesia there is a collection of some of the most curious statues In the world. The statues are carved in linden wood and are slightly more than life size. They comprise a considerable number of figures, which include the 12 Apostles, a few saints, peasant women and even a figure represent ing the former lord of /-the manor, who is seen with his arm Jinked through that of a soldier comrade. All of the statues are hollow at d each one of them is a beehive, open ings Id the backs of the figures pro-" viding for the entrance and exits of the honey-gathering insects. The recprds.Qf, the manor show that the first of the wooden statues was put in place in the year 1600.—Phila delphia Record Sunday Magazine. Shooting Merely a Bluff Some Latin-Amerlcan countries re sort to revolutions as a simple form of election ahd regard it as the best method for making a political change, Charles H. Cunningham, for mer United States commercial at tache at Lima, Peru, said at St. Louis recently. “There Is a lot of blank shooting done in some of the revolutions, with shots being fired mainly for effect,” Cunningham said. “During some of the revolutions In Peru foreigners were allowed to transact business as usual in down-' town' districts, but Were warned, to ■ keep off of certain streets where, fighting was going on. ; * t — -i-, Frank Confection . “So you want to marry my daugh ter,” said the maw-—“ Who put you up to coming to me about itV” “To teli the truth,” sighed the young man, “it was the banker who holds my notes.” Wrong Place He —I’m groping for words. She —Well, you don’t expect to find them around my neck, do you? Modern Help Lady (at employment agency)— Have you your references with you? Cook —Yes’m! have you? To keep clean and healthy take Dr, Pterce’e Pleasant Pellets. They regulate liver, bowel* and stomach.—Adv. When one-can analyze a thrill,, he has well-nigh lost it. Stronger than He Was at Twenty .* 1 "1.., ' • c _ . , I————■—— I ■■■! ShIP f &/ : , ,J|B ~rj? * 17IFTY-FIVE years old, and still " going strong! ' Po you want the secret of such vitality? It isn’t what you eat, or - any tonic you take. It’s something anyone can do—something you can start today and see results in a weekl All you do is give your vital ■" organs the right stimulant. A famous doctor discovered the way to stimulate a sluggish system to new energy. It brings fresh vigor to everu organ. Being a physician’s , prescription, it’s quite harmless. Tell your druggist you want a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin. Get the benefit of its fresh laxative herbs, active senna, and that pure pepsin. Get that lazy liver to work, those stagnant'bowels into action. Get rid of waste matter that is slow * _ ,: - . v ,-•- " fcSMB •*•*■■*• I Baxolite mnii mimi MIMm. Ai ill u§ stow; The Job Hunter “Has your man' found a job yet, Mrs. Waggs?” “Yes, Indeed, I start to work Moft day." ,', y.;',; "■ M condition for outdoor work I by using Mcntholatum regularly. ■ M It is Indispensable for cracked, H n CHRLTOMIC ' F °r over so [Malaria remedy for all forms of fT' and It is a Reliable, Fever General Invig orating Tonic. lUenglie Sunshine **** —Alt Winter Long At Hm Foremost Desert Resort of the West—marvelous climate—warm sunny days—clear starlit nights—dry invigorating air splendid roads gorgeous mountain scenes—finest hotels—the ideal winter home. Writ* Of— a Chaffy PALM SPRINGS / Cmlifornito FREBGHT PAID I —On Saws to Be Changed to HI Simonds Inserted Tooth, Saw HI hack next day.same as new and Hi guaranteed. Freight is quick, i j. h ivnner shre;ve:port ' La H SAW M FG. CO. m t rmia ry. miss HI Man, White, 38. Hottest, Energetic, Con genial, wants partnership with farm own er. either sex. Stanley M. Warner. P. O. Box 56. Argentine Sta.. Kansas City, Kan. Ladies send SI.OO for regular $6.00 pe&rl necklace. Guaranteed. Sena P. O. money order, or registered mail. F. W. Waite, ' P. O. Box 1693* Jacksonville. Florida. ' ■" . .. a Agents. Sell old Heidelberg Brew Bricks. The latest sensation; easy to sel\ fast to repeat, building up a permanent business from satisfied customers. Bample postpaid 75 cents. Twentieth Century Malt Products Co., .36 West 20th 6t., New York City. For Sale—Shelled pecans. Whole halves,lb. 35c. Broken .halves, lb. 30c. Parcel, post paid. Shreve'Trading Co.. Crest Fla. Ladies: s4»<Jax. stringing pearl necklaces. Stamped addressed envelope brings infor. matlon. Bead craft 371Fu^tonat..Brooklyn.N.Y , ' That’s No Li. ■■ “tJot-a standipf’jiwuihivfery Satur day night.” “How comet Engaged?” “No. Working in a store.” if YO U 1 If have PIMPLES 1/ or SKIN BLEMISHES Cut Out This Ad and Mail to CENTURY NATIONAL CHEMICAL CO. Ward A Cross Sts., Paterson, N. J. For o FREE Cake of GLENN’S Sulphur Soap Some prejudices are very useful— especially among people you can’t reach with reason. . Water on the brain can sometimes be avoided by using umbrellas. poison so long as it is permitted to remain in the system. The nets energy men and women feel before one hotile of Dr. Caldweirt syrup pepsin has been used up is proof of hw much the system needs this help. Get a bottle of this delicious syrup and let it end that constant worry about the condition of the ' bowels. Spare the children those bilious days that make them miser able. Save your household from the use of cathartics winch lead to chronic constipation. And guard against auto-intoxication as you grow older, Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin is such a well known preparation you can get ib-wherever drugs are sold and it isn’t expensive. . 4 . . .. -rj y- 7^~V- [KMf FOOD MAIN THING AS PULLETS GROW Oversupply of Chick Mash Not Wise’. ..'i - . ~, -iCrr t The success or failure of the+poul try industry depends upon the care and feeding of the pullets during the growing age, according to Prof. R. S. Dearstyne, head, of the poultry depart • mem at North Carolina State college. “Cockerels and pullets should be sep arated as early as possible,” snys Mr. Dearstyne. “This eliminates crowd ing, which ■' tends to retard -develop ment in the young birds, which means a small hen with a correspondingly low egg production.” The feeding problem, while often neglected, is of major Importance, states Mr. Dearstyne. It Is a mistake to carry the young pullets through the developing' period on chick mash, as such feeding tends to bring about an early lay and a molt when eggs are at - a premium. The high protein feeds should be decreased when the birds are ten weeks old so as to bring them into fay about the first of October, be says.. When the birds are fourteen weeks old, a grain ration should be kept be fore them at all times and Mr. Dear-/ styne recommends 'that two-thirds grain and one-third mash be fed until the birds go Into the laying "house; The consumption of grain may be reg ulated by keeping grain In the hoppers all the time and by feeding mash sev eral times a day for limited periods. Flock’s Need of Protein Made Scientific Record Scientific research' is 1 just a high-. r sounding phrase topmost of us, but that agriculture owes much of the ad vance it nnS made in the last half cen tury totscience is the plain truth. The laboratory yields its secrets only to Its elect, but the results are often so sim- a child can profit b. them. Examples of this are plentiful on the farm, and now comes an announce ment from the research laboratory of a large commercial feed plant of a discovery which will interest poultry raisers, especially just now. Through. sejotes of experiments In feeding many thousands of baby chicks these sci entists say they have proven that a proper synchronization of proteins In s*' 5 *' the feed is necessary to produce best results fn pigmentation, feathering, growth, and vitality, They refer to the discovery as an ingredient which no doubt will prove equally successful in all live stock rations. —Southern Ag riculturist. Increasing Hatchabllity Hatchabiiity of eggs has been defi nitely Increased by proper feeding of flocks at Ohio State university. A basal ration containing 30 per cent yel low corn when fed to birds in confine ment produced an average hatachabii ity of only 36.9 per cent. Skimmiik added' to this ration - _ able improvement; and an outdoor yard with bluegrass increased hatcha bility to 60.9 per cent; When the percentage of corn in the ration was increased from 30 tq 6T>, the addition of soybean hay increased'': hatchabiiity from 35.7 to 61.7 per cent; alfalfa hay to 59.4 per cent, and cloveiHhay./tO 57.8 per cent. Rluegrass range jumped It so: 04 pec, cent.— Prairie Farmer. 1 Green Feeds Are Necessary An abundance of green feed Is nec essary at all times. A lack of it causes ill health and low- production. Greens are a tonic that stimulate the- ” appetite. They also aid the digestive 1 tract- t,o function- properly, thereby se curing for the birds a larger use from the feed consumed. Birds should be given nil the greens that they can eat, once daily at a regular, period. This is best given at noon or-iq the late afternoon. Sprouted oats is one of the best forms of greens and should be fed When the sprouts are from one to three indies In length.—American Fruit Grower. Poultry Facts Turkeys made a good return to Minnesota producers in 1931. „ 1 ' * * * ,* , ' It is difficult to keep a brooder hodse dry when it Is crowded. Moist Utter helps spread disease... The White Leghorn flock on the ' farm of J. J. Bisagno of Augusta, Kan., averaged 230 eggs for the 1936- 31 season; the top hen produced 291 egg*. • • * . In spells of dnrk, cloudy weather, c6d liver oil In the ration is a fine substitute for sunshine. .—__Jo—JL-Bu Tfcei Pekin duck has a creamy white plumage and a long, broad and deep body with n full breast and deep keel! Theirs Is an Idea body formation for a market bifd. ——- • * Lights In the laying house may not Increase the total number of eggs laid In a year, but they do shift some of the heavy spring laying to the winter months when prices 1 are better. • • • The year’s supply of egg case? can be purchased to the’best advantage .vhen th' ; heaviest withdrawals are made from cold storage. V: » • • One hundred hens, laying heavily, will transpire three to four gallons of water as vapor In a day. The non* layers will give off only half as much. An outstanding example of what can be done In raising turkeya is the.farm of A. Machon of Ontario, Malheur 1 county, Oregon, where 2,000-birds have ba«r raised successfully on ten acres. JW t • 3 F " f IJMM riL~ 1-< '* .r- *'*l.l CHILD need REGULATING? CASTORIA WILL DO IT I When your childmeeds regulating, remember this; the organs of babies • and children :«re Little bowels must bfffently urged—never forced. That’s Castorla Is used by so many and mothers. It is specially mac for children’s ail ments ; contain: no harsh, harmful drugs, no nardotes. You can safely give it to yoftg infants for colic pains. Yet It scan equally effective regulator for ofer. children. The next time your child has a little cold or fever, or a dlgqsive upset, give him the help of Casoria, the children’s own remedy. feoulpe ? Oastoria al ways has the j* ne: / ' : Z : <i ( / CAS tO RI A * ■ " r mk Play* liii Bride In Bridegroom «as only one of the roles taken by C H. S. Parsons, son »f Rev. Dawsw Parsons of St. James’, Sheffield, England, at his own wedding. Acting as organist, he played the bridal march qs his bride, .* Miss Nellie Howtrts, entered his fa ther’s church. Itan lie joined her and marched With her to the altar. COLDS RUB Musterokwell into your cheat ‘ . and throat—almost instantly you feel easier. Repot the Musterole-rub once an hour Jor five hours . . . what a glorious rdefl _ Thoee good oldfashioned cold reme dies—oil of mustard, menthol, camphor —are mixed with ether valuable ingredi- ‘ - ents in Musterokto make it- what doc tors cMz‘‘counttr-irritant" because • it gets action aiuis no£ just a salve. It penetrates and stimulates blood circulation and hdps to draw out infec tion and pain. Ued by millions for 20 years. Recommskleduy many doctors and nurses." All dragrists. T 8 Mothers-Musterole is also made in mild* form for babies ond small children. Ask for Chil dren's Musterole. - —. * ~ Frankly Speaking “ ' . “It says here that the average per son says 10,000 Words a day.” “I have always .said you were above the average, dear.” Der Wahre Jakob, Berlin. grTh E a N ir NATURALLY Easy to do this quick way Don’t dye hair. Science has discovered a quick, simple way to darken gray hair naturally—so nobody can tell— restore its origiusl shade safely and as easily as bruiting. It makes, the hair healthy. Finest way known to get rid of gray hair, as thousands testify. Try it. Pay druggist only 75d -v for a bottle of WYETH'S SAGE & SULPHUR and follow easy direc tions. Results will delight you. —■! ''-"—j - A Journeyman Already Householder—pven_Jf you ate begging ydb might be polite when asking. f - Beggar—tviialjj Trying to teach me iny trade? J Bedridden with Rheumatism S Rubs on 0i1... gets | up right away There’s nothing like good old St. Jacobs Oil for relieving the aches arid pains of —‘•'Keurhis, Rheuma tism, Lumbago,Backache, Neuralgia or sore Muicles»Yoyj rub if on. With-, ,* out burning odbiistering it-quickly draws out pal and inflammation. Relief comes hi >re you can count 601 Get a small bot > from your druggist. When H Would Know “Was It a i lend gave you that cigar?” ¥ ”I*ll tell you when I’ve lit It.” BAD COUGH ■ • • FELT WEAK, TIRED Ga.— put, did not eB- Bjf ® continuously,*’ °F 14 Schell Ave., "I had to be propped up at night to get a little rest. I was urged to try .Dr. Pierce’* Golden Medical Discovery and after I had taken two bottles my cough had cleared up, but I kept on taking it until I was entirely well." All drqy|i 1t) fluid OP uhl«u. Writ! Dr yum’a CllnU la Buffalo, N - Y -> t«r hm' •edt«l edulee. , '• •, ’• • . ■ * ;U Factors Making for Weed Seeds in Soil Get Control by Draining and \. Summer Fallowing. The length of time weed seeds re iimln vital depends on a number of fac tors, spch as having an oily coat like wild mustard seed, the kind of soil and the depth to which the weed seeds are plowed: Seeds may be a long time in heavy soils where they are below the point of germination. Seeds of any tynd need air, moisture and heat to s tWt germination, which usually ob tatM in the top two or three inches of soil. Below five inches of soil too many vital weed seeds may be found which are brought up to the = spring idto life and grow. The' use of summer fallow and hoed crops'are the best agencies In controlling weeds. Equlsetum or horse tail Is a non flowerlrig-'plant, is perennial and spreads by spores instead of seeds. It grows more frequently In damp or springy sour soils, but also grows on high, well drained places, as along rail way banks. Too much of It in hay fed to horses has caused trouble. Get-- tlng the soil- better drained and sum fer fallowing the land Infested will holdft’ln control. Where green moss ta seen forming on the surface of the land one may be sure It is a sign of sourness and It needs lime In 'some form to. sweeten It. Some ground limestone Is tbe cheapest of lime to use. Formaldehyde Good for Treating Smut in OMs Smut infection In oats was more general than average In 1931 and cut yields sharply on many fields. This means that the spores are more wide ly distributed than usual on oats that will be used for seed this year. There fore,' treating against smut should be the general practice this spring. With TSeThiproved methods of using for maldehyde for treatment, not only Is Irea’tlng Inexpensive but it eliminates the old problem of swollen oats that might be injured by a sharp freeze and always were difficult to get through the seeder at the desired rate. It is now known that applying for maldehyde with the spray gun, a method which leaves the oats only slightly damp. Is as effective as soak ing with a sprinkling can. Mercuric dusts also have proved* not only convenient but highly- effec tive in treating for' smut. Approxi mately two ounces of dust Is used per busntel of wheat and rye. Oats and barley require about , three ounces.; • Dusts are convenient in that the seed grain may be treated several weeks ahead of seeding.—Wallace’s Farmer' Saving Waste Products „ For-every pound of farm profitably used there are from one to .two and a half pounds from which the farmer gets little or no return, states Dr. Henry G. Knight, chief of the bu reau of chemistry, United States De partment of Agriculture. His depart ment is trying to find profitable meth ods of using the millions of tolls of farm by-products which annually go to waste. Cornstalks and such waste products offer a greater benefit to,, farmers than would an Increased pro duction of the Important crops when - -there Is airead'y a surplus in most of them, the chief believes. ' ’<•. , . r .-t-- Potato Decrease Farmers intend to decrease their po tato acreage about 1% per cent, ac cording to the “fntentidh-to-plant” re ports of growers to the United Sthtes Department of Agriculture. If no changes are made In the present plans, , there will be 3,328,000 acres this'sum mer. a* compared with 3,382,000 acres in 1931. Most of ttils' reduction Is planned In the commercial-producing states, while, the, .Late-.grown potatoes produced mainly for home and local Consumption In Indiana, Ohio and Illi nois may show an Increase of about 4 per cent—lndiana Farmer’s Guide. Agricultural Notes The earlier lime Is applied the soon er it begins to correct acidity for next year's clover. * * * In Virginia some raspberry growers ore using 500 pounds per acre of 0-10-4 fertilizer between 5 the rows. • " * • One way to cut down the cost of ralsing appies is to weed out the va rieties it doesn’t pay-to .grow. * * * Work corn ground well before planting, then gultivar.ion can be de layed until the corn Is high enough to cultivate easily, Ki!' lha wet-ds be fore rather than after planting. «• ... Even though the bottom of the hog cycle has almost been reached, rural economists believe that there will not he’ a very large increase In hog pro duction during the next three yearn. .* * * Inventory values of live stotfc on farms In the United States are $3,000,- 000,000 lower than they were two years ago, " ~ ... .. ... Wyoming rinks third in the produc tion of sheep and wool, producing 3,100,000 sheep and 25,000,000 pounds of wool annually. - - 2-^-1.- ... * Reforestation will reclaim the fer tility of steep eroded hlllsMes, and prevent further soil losses. The tim ber crop Is the most successful for the purpose. _ . *-» Inoculation of alfalfa has always been regarded as an aid to a good stadd. But It Is even more than that Hay from Inoculated plants contains more protein per, ton than that from plnnts not Inoculated. ' -* /• , • • • This Is a good time to reconstruct tha. producing units on the farm. The woodlot Is Included In this group. To remove the weeds and culls from the woods Is constructive wort. This will aid In developing more and better tlm her for the time when It will sell at a premium. ' - , ,-i._ ''■ L %.,. {£ | j I s Fatigue is the signal to rest. Obey 1 fIHK it if you ran. When you can't, keep MW cool and carry-on in comfort. \ r - Bayer Aspirin was meant for B||§||i|ft just such times, for it insures your | comfort. Freedom from those pains t?fP|§§B| that nag at nerves and wear you down. One tablet will block that I‘4 - threatening headache while it is still just a threat. Take two or - three tablets when you’ve caught a 7-iXvM cold, and that's usually the end Carry Bayer Aspirin when you * travel. Have some at home and »?'» A ) ’if keep some at the office. like au efficient secretary, it will often “save the day" and spare you many uncomfctable, unproductive hours. [, Perfectly harmless, so keep it ” handy, keep it in mind, and use it. pMpWo No man of affairs can afford to li .... ignore the score and more of uses I explained in die proven directions. From a grunMng tooth to those rheumatic paihs which seem almost to bend the bones, Bayer Aspiria always works. Neuralgia. Neuritis. - : ' '' Any nagging, needless pain. .Get the genuine tablets, stamped I with the Bayer crosk. They are of YhS perfect purity, absolute uniformity, K and have the same action every time. US stake. But there is economy in the j purchase 0 f genuine Bayer Aspiria Scot Saw Possibilities of Under-Water Craft The story of the evolution of un der-water boats seldom makes men -1 tion of a Scotsman’s idea Which, had it been translated into practical form, might have given Scotland the honor of producing the first sub marine, says a writer in the Weekly Scotsman. That distinction falls, ac ’ tually, to a Dutchman, Cornelius Van Drebbell, who constructed, a jsubmerslble craft which was tried out on the River Thames, near Lon don, In the early part of 1624, but, did not prove much of a success. It is a.remarkable fact that nearly thirty years before Van Drebbell’s Invention John Napier of Merchis ton. the celebrated inventor of lo garithms, announced that be had in mind a similar innovation in meth ods of navigation.. Tn a pamphlet I FELLOWS’SYRUP Women Doctors Banned * by Colonial Lawmakers Though American women have gained. In recent years, considerable prominence In the medical profes sion, their achievement has not been effort, writes Capt. John Lee Maddox In the New York Evening. Post. About thd"year 1638 Mrs. Jane Hawkins was threatened with deportation from the Colony .of Massachusetts If she did not- get. out within three months, and she was warned not to meddle, in the mean time, with surgery, physic, plasters or oils. Again, about the year 1750, a Bos ton physician wrote concerning a Protect Your Children Photect your children from those nasty colds that always Jj come when winter is breaking up. Doctors recommend Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil as an effective resistance-builder. Its Vitamin A helps protect children from recurrent colds. iWT And its Vitamin D helps build strong bones and teeth. Young sters—and grown-ups, too—find this emulsion an easy, pleasant way of taking cod liver oil. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N.J. - Sales Representative, Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc., New York. - LiSTKN to the Scott ci Bovine radio program, "Adventuring with Count oon Buckner," on Sunday night at 8.30 P.M. (/f. S. X.) over the Columbia ' Coaet-to-Coaet Network. —- I Scott’s Emulsion § loi \oit n/67 iv" con iii iit on . 3 “DoubU” Plague* Premier For a brief space Premier MacDon ald of England lay under the dark suspicion of quarreling with a shop keeper over a pound of butter. It was reported that the premier, accom panied by. his daughter, rebuked the tradesman for stocking onij, Danish butter; Before Scotland Yard could Tired, Nervous and Depressed ? When Kidneys HIKED promptly a nagging U backache, with bladder ir inSP'k regularities and a tired, nervous, Hi :J | :,l| |k depressed feeling'. They may warn iW » ■ 1 Wj<SS|. of some disordered kidney or > fit ,'US bladder condition. . Users everywhere rely on Down’s ; j Villa. The sale of millions of boxes annually attests to Doan’s popu larlty. Your dealer has Doan’s. Doan’s Pills 11C i ... ■ • r* ' .1 ' '■ ■ ' ■'. 1 a s' ... i*. ’ri .,■ • . ‘ ' .. ;• ■-t iJf’Stirt V• 1 ‘i • t '.*•••• . which he published In Edinburgh oa June 7, 1596, Napier referred to “de vices of sailing 1 under the waters, ’’ which he “hopes to perform.” He does not appear to have attempted to realize that hope, however, and no more is heard of the idea of a Scot tish submarine which, we may take It, would have given the Firth of Forth an additional measure of fame. - ’- s ; Plowin’ Time Visitor—l never saw the country so stirred up. Native—Shucks, you should be here when plowin’ season sets In. — Pathfinder. „ Audiences seem -4o be this way : If they must be offered a vamp, they like to see the designing lady thrown contemptuously aside. —?jr • f" 1 'T'" piece of recent medical legislation: “it was one of the happiest fruits of improved medical' education that by this bill females were excluded from the practice of medicine, and this only had been effected by the united and persevering efforts of some of the most distinguished men iu tlje profession. The act enjoined wom en not only from the general prac tice of medicine, but also from that of obstetrics." Urn “Is the world’ getting better?” "I thing so. People no longer break up--yotir home to get your flat." be put on the case It transpired that the customer Was Dr. E. Cotlis, pro fessor of public health at the Uni versity of Wales, who bears a strik ing likeness to the premier and is ao old friend of his. The gardener’s occupation is cer tainly a seedy one.
The Burnsville Eagle (Burnsville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 1, 1932, edition 1
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