Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / March 20, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
TOO MUCH YARN ON THEJMRKET GASTON COUNTY TEXTILE MEN EXPLAIN REASON OF CUR TAILMENT. ARE SELLING YARN AT COST Will Continue to Pay Half Time Wages In Event Plants Must Close Down Entirely. Ji Qastonla. Manufacturers of the county declare with posltlveness thai there Is no need of alard over the curtailment process now being insti tuted in the textile plans of the county. It Is & natural result and conditions will be rectified within 0 to 90 days, .Bay the manufacturers. la simply too much yarn on ■the. m arket and there must be a halt in its manufacture. Many mills would fare better If they would shut down entirely and not a wheel turn for the next two months, say ftpme mill men, and it 1s tor the purpose of taking care of the help that the mills are running as much as they are, on half time. A great many mills are selling yarn not at cost, or nearly so, just breaking' even so as to give employ ment to the help, the officers declare. Cotton manufacturers of the coun ty believe that these conditions will be stabilized within the next two months and that the curtailment pro gram will help toward that end. When the brokers and jobbers find that southern mills are running only halt time, that Information Itself will tend to steady things. They will know that there will be no great output of yarn being stocked up, which can be had for a song, so to speak. While this period of curtailment is going on, the surplus yarn will be dis posed of, and then manufacturers say they can enter the market with a clean slate, facing a demand for yarn. 'There have been worse times than we are now experiencing," said one veteran. Oaston county textile man discusnng this matter, "we'll weather this depression. There will never be the boom times we once experienced, however." While cotton mill men regret the curtailment process, they figure it is better to run a while at half time rather than shut down altogether la ter. Even if they should be forced to that extremity, they would continue to pay the employes half time wages, they say. Grant Recognition to Russia. Peking. The preliminary agree ment by which China grants deplo matlc recognition to Raaala was sign ed here and presented to the Cabinet Immediately tor ita approval. Formal announcement that recogni tion has been granted waa expected following the cabinet meeting. The document waa signed by For* elgn Minister Wang and the Ruaslan representative Karakhan. Successful conclusion of the agree l ment came after several weeks nego tiations. An accord on details waa re ported several days ago but there was • final hitch over language which held-up the signing until later. The Chtdese draft la In English and China Insisted that the version be recognised as the official one. Urge Test of Women'e Mind. Seffner, Fla.—A petition, signed by two ministers, a school principal, and two prominent business men, was ready for presentation to County Judge Julian Hasard. requesting that * lunacy commission be appointed to | examine Igrs. Laura Winchester charged with the murder of her aged husband, J. C. Winchester, of this city. The Winchester family tnoved „here v from Oastonla, N. C. . Confined In a padded cell In the • Hillsborough County Jail, Mrs. Vttn . ■ Chester, according to Jail attendants, , . continued to spasmodically shout: "My daughter 1s Innocent." p Increase In Employment. Waahington.-VThe first general In > > erease since June, 1913. In employ ment In manufacturing Industries in .the United States was reported In February, It waa showed in ststistics complied by the department of labor Based on reports from 822 establish stents In U Industries, there wss "an increase of 8.7 per cent In pay roll .totals, an Increase of 5:4 per cent In per capita earnings, and an increase of 1.2 per cent in the number of per sons employed. HG£V' jl High Wind ft owe Train Off Treetie. Delhi, bulla—More than 50 persons • vera drowned and an equal numbei H seriously Injured near Berenices a re *alt of one of the moet peculiar accl ' dents la Indian Hallway history. A crowded paeaenger train was " erasing a lone bridge over a river H.-Wban a sudden wind squall of cyclonic kowportlons swept the entire train j? Hap the rails, sending It hurtling into , Moat of thp dead were In three car CfeffM Which ware completely sak ■Pgr* - V FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA, FIRE DAMAGE $300, 000. I Farmville, Va.—Fire of unex plained origin which has gained considerable headway when discov ered, destroyed two large tobacco sales warehouses and damaged the annex of the Presbyterian church here, with an aggregate loss esti mated at $300,000. The tobacco houses were two of the largest operated by the city. Onue, operated by a concern affl "lated with the Co-operative Tobac co Orowers association, contained a large quantity of tobacco which was consumed, while the second had but little In storage. SALE HAS SPENT ITS FURY VICTIMS OF SNOW-FREIGHTED HURRICANE WHICH BWEPT ATLANTIC COAST. • ♦ Eight Llvee Lost In New York City Alone By Btorm Tying Up Trans portation. New York. —The captain of the Ward Line freighter Santiago and 24 of his men are believed to hav& been lost at sea with their vessel in the snow-freighted hurricane which swept the Atlantic coast, taking eight lives in New York City alone. After raging at 80 miles an hour along Qe eastern seaboard from Cape Hatteras, where the Santiago went down, to EastporO Maine, the gale appeared to have spent its fury. Its path on land and sea was marked by scores of disabled craft, enormous property damagke and a long list of dead ,and injured. Transportation, power distributing systems and lines of communication were most seriously crippled. The storm inflicted upon Brboklyn a com plete tie-up of its rapid transit lilies, stranding hundreds of thousands of commuters. Ten men were reported rescued and 25 were missing from the freighter Santiago, news of whose sinking 60 miles south of Cape Hatteras was car ried In a radio message intercepted by the Charleston (S. C.) navy yard sta tion. How the Santiago sank was not told. The first message, signed cap tain of the Norwalglan steamship Cissy, simply said: "Picked up lifeboat containing six sailors, three firemen, one carpenter, from the steamer Santiago, which sank 0 miles from Hatteras. No otfer life boats seen, proceeding Bal timore." Local officers of the Ward Line, listed the other 26 members of the crew as "probably missing," Includ ing the captain, J. S. Baldwin. France to Get Huge Bank Loan. New York.—Establishment of bank ing credit of not less than 9100,000,- 000 In favor of the Bank of France has been arranged by an American banking group, headed by J. P. Mor gan and company, it was announced. The loan is fully secured by gold held in the vaulta of the Bank of France, which Is acting for the French government, and will be used to estab lish French exchange and for such other purposes as the French govern ment may determine. In view of the excellent security behind the loan. It Is believed the In terest rate Is well below that of some of the recent foreign loans floated here In the form of bond Issues. The group Is limited to bankers of New York and neighboring cities, ap plications to share In the loan exceed ing the amount required by the French government. In connection with the credit, the governor of the Bank of France has Issued a statement which sets forth the following points. 1. Complete measures are being taken to better the financial situation. 2.. The French government Is In sisting that the senate ahall ratify the newy tax measure, which means balancing the budget, and shall ap- j prove the policy of stopping new ex- j penditures. - I. Until the financial altnajtlan has, been greatly bettered the government j will undertake no new borrowings whatsoever except for. -funding ex isting floating Indebtedness. 4. After such Improvement in the financial situation has been shown the government will make no' *•«,♦., .loan, even for > re-construction in the liberated regions, without being as sured that the budget will cover the aervlce of such new loan 6. The Bank of France will con tinue to envisage and assist the sit-' nation. Would Let Unele Bam *lx Income Tax Chicago.—Sending the government a blank check and Inviting "Uncle Sam to write (n the amount," '« the way one man extricated hlmselt from the Income tax dilemma. 1 am sending a blank signed check," the letter received by the col lector of interna] revenue said, "I don't know whether Coolldge la go ing to cut the Mellon or not bat make eat the check to salt yourself and if there Is any redaction, make It oat Us my favor." ... The una waa withheld. s THE ALAMANCE GT.EANEB. GRAHAM. N. C. BONUS PROVIDES LIFE INSURANCE BILL ORDERED SENT TO THE HOUBE BY. WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE. LOANS HFTER FIRST TWO YEARS Provision For Cash Payment to Veter ans Entitled to Only Fifty Dollars. Washington.—The new soldier bon us bill was'ordered sent to the house by the ways and means committee and a plan was generally agreed upon by the committee to push the measure forward under a suspension of the rules which would permit a rote In one day and prevent amendments. The new measure, differing mate rially from the bill passed last ses sion and vetoed by President Harding, limits the bonus to paid up ,20 year endowment life insurance policies but provides cash payments to veterans not entitled to mor6 than SSO. The same basis of adjusted compen sation allowed in the old bill, $1 a day for home service and $1.25 for overseas service, is provided. In fig uring the face value of the policy, however, 25 per cent is added to the adjusted service credit and also the interest on the total amount com pounded annually at 4 per cent for 20 years. • Loans after the first two yean would be allowed on the policies up to 90 per cent of the paid ipp value.. Revised estimates showed the maxi mum total cost of the measure would be $2,119,000,000 spread over a period of 20 years. , Chairman Green declared careful in quiry had shown the cost could le met by the government from current revenue without additional taxes. In computing the adjusted service credit the 60 days of service would not be counted. All veterans, including officers up to arid including the rank of captain In the army and marine corps and lieutenant In the navy, would be eligible for the bonus aid also dependents of veterans who have died since the war. The cost of the measure would be much less, committee members said, than the bill passed in 1922, which provided four options—cash payments to those not entitled to more than S6O; adjusted service certificates, sim ilar to the present life insurance poli cies; vocational training aid and farm or home aid. Senate Rejects Farm Loan. Washington —The aenate, deaplte President Coolidge's indorsement, re fused by a vote of 41 to 32, to auth orise the proposed loan of 150,900,000 farmera of the spring wheat belt to finance their start In the poultry, swine and live stock Industries. In disposing ,of the proposal, car ried In the Norbeck-Burtness bill as the first of several special agrarian relief measures, the senate divided along geographical rather than party lines. The result showed 23 Demo crate and 18 Republicans opposing and 20 Republicans. ten , Democrats and two Farmer-Labor members sup porting the bill. Leaders of the farm bloc lnslated that the result of the fight for the Norbeck-Burtness bill did ont Indi cate the senators' sentiment toward remaining relief bills. Women Mysteriouely Blain. Thomasvllle, N. C. —Chief of Police L. q. Jenkins, of this city, formerly on the Chsrlotte police force, was held responsible by a coroner's Jury here for the killing of a woman whose dead body bathed in blood was found In e room here, guarded by a live year old girl who says the dead woman was her mother and wko says her father was In the room when her mother waa shot. s According to the verdict of the coroner's Jury, th# woman came to her death from a gunshot wound Inflicted from a gun In the hands of L. C. Jenkins. Frenc Prlcee Improve. Now York.—Continued covering op erations by European speculator* »»«orht In the price of the French Tranc wntck- A drop In demand sterling to $4.24 8-4, an overnight loss of almost a cent, was attributed to selling for the pur pose of utilising funds to cover francs In the event of sudden advances. Bel gian trancs. selling si S.»O cents, were almost 80 points higher. House Members Pass Deficiency ■!" Washington.—A deficiency appro prlatlon bill carrying approximately 1165.000.000 was passed by the house. Only 20 members were on the floor when the measure was sent Oo Its way to the senate. Items la the bill Include 1105,447. 000 for refund of taxes Illegally collect-' ad; tIS.BSO.OOO for additional coast guard craft aad personnel for use against rum runners, aad 15.000.000 for hospital facilities tor former, ser Tie* man. completing the authorisa tion «a the Laagljy bill. THREE YOUNG GIRLS KILLED IN ACCIDENT. Camden, Three young women were killed and one man was probably fatally injured when the automobile In which they were riding was struck by a fast pas senger train of the Missouri Paci fic Railroad at a crossing here. The dead are Misses Grace and Lulu Vaughn, sisters and Georgia Allen, telephone operators, employ, ed in the local exchange. Jet Vaughan, brother of the two women killed, was not expected to live through the night, according to at tendants at the hospital to which he was taken. SHE ACTS US HIS EXECUTRIX TO DETERMINE MANNER IN WHICH HER HUSBAND'S PA PERS GO TO PUBLIC i Atto>rtey Advlaes Her Bhe Has Legal Rights In Publication of His Paper*. Washington.—Mrs. Wood row Wilson has decided to avail herself of her legal rights to check publication of selections from her Rite husband's letters and manuscripts until she can determine in what manner the war President's papers will be given to the public as a whole and in an auth oritative way. It is Mrs,. Wilson's Intention, as ex ecutrix of the President's estate, either to have his letters and manu scripts assembled and published by some one who will act on her author ity; or to gather them into a collec tion of Wllsonia and make it avail able to the public probably by deposit ing the paper* in some national. in stitution such as the library of Con gress. Mrs. Wilson has been advised by her family attorney that as executrix of Mr. Wilson's -estate she has legal rights' In the publication of his let ters and manuscripts, not alone under; the law and authorities, but under an amendment to the copyright law, now part of the revised statutes or the United States, which provides as fol lows: "Section 4967: Every person who shall print or publish any manu script whatever without the consent of the author or proprietor first ob tained, shall be liable to the author or proprietor for all damages occas ioned by such Injury."' Since Mr. Wilson's death some of his letters have bfeen published, some others have been offered for sale, and still others were in process of publi cation and widely advertised, until ftrs. Wilson determined upon her ac tion. One publisher whose output runs into millions of copies, made aver a whole number of hi* publication after it was on the presses, and is now tak ing steps to recall copies which al ready were on their »|vay to circulation. During Mr. Wilson's last days hr expressed some annoyance at the writings of various authors, who he ■aid he felt we're representing them selves as having b6en in his dence and in position to relate "the Inside" on various Important affairs. Since his death, his widow has told Intimates that she had the same feel ing, but she contemplated no action until her atorney called her attention to her statutory rights as executrix. Coolldge Ask* Action on Tax Act Washington. President Coolldge made request of Congress to adopt immediately a resolution making ef fective the 26 per cent reduction in personal Income taxes payable thl* year, now carried in the revenue bill but It met with an unencouraglng re sponse. This reaction was especially pronounced in the house, where such legislation would have to originate and where 'leaders turned down at tempt to obtain such action. The President urged through a mes sage to' Congress .that the proposed cut be made effective before Saturday, when first instalment* on the taxe* muat be paid. | President to Deliver Addressee. Washington. Tentatlt*®. speaking engagements for President Coolldge, announced at the White House, show that the executive expects to deliver a number of, addresses during the spring. only engagement at any dls 'tance from Washington, however, is for an address in New York on April IS at the annual meeting' of the ASy sociated Press. In addition, he has a list of proba ble engagements, two addreases In Indiana early la May. Grain on Farms. Washington.—Grain remaning on farms March 1 was estimated by the Department of Agriculture as: Corn 1,153.175,000 bashels, or 17.8 per cent of the IHI crop. Wheat. 188,871,000 bushels, or 17.0 per ceat of the 1883 crpp. Oats,, 444.810,000 bushels. or 43 2 percent of the 1888 crop. Barley, 44.844,100 bushels, or 88.8 per ceat of the 1881 crop. . Of the 1888 crap about 80.8 per ceat la merchantable, compar ed with a tea-year average of 80.1 par ceat MINISTER KILLED BY AUTOMOBILE Rev. M. F. DANIELS KNOCKED DOWN BY ONe CAR AND RUN OVER BY ANOTHER. WHILE CROSSING THE STREET Recently Resigned a* Superintendent of Home Mission* In the N. C. Preebyterlan Bynod. , Greenville, S. C.—Rev. Milton F. Daniels,, of Charlotte, N. C, who re cently resigned as superintendent of Horn 6 Missions in the North Carolina Presbyterian- synod to enter the evan gelistic field, was killed almost lir stantly here > when he was _ knocked down bv one automobile and run over by another, as he was crasslng the street to his hotel after the conclusion of the evening service in his first engagement as an evangelist. Neither of the machines stopped to render assistance to the stricked man, who was hurried to a hospital, where it was ascertained that his condition was hopeless, and where he died almost Immediately. His wife and their two children are now said to be in Savannah, Oa. The police have been unable to get any informa tion that may lead to the arrest of the men responsible for the accident * The minister had Just emerged 'from the First Presbyterian church, where he had preached the evening dermon, and was crossing the street,] when an approaching automobile struck him and knocked him to the pavement Before be could regain his feet and seek safety a second car, approaching from the opposite direc tion, ran over him, fatally injuring him. The drivers of both cars sped away in the darkness before bystand ers could learn their Identity or se cure their license numbers. New Occupants on 6th of Farm*. Washington.—Almost a fifth of the country' farms had new occupants in 1922. Nine Southern states showed changes la more than a quarter of their farms, the Department of Agrl-. culture announced here after a sur vey of the situation, and only six states, all in New England, showed less than ten per c«nt change in their farm occupants. In most of the corn belt and western states changes ranged from ten to fifteen per cent. The chief cause of the turnover la believed by agricultural experts to be the attractiveness of new land, which ~ln the past has set up waves of migra tion among the farm population. An other cause is seen in the extent to which farm land has been bought and sold for Investment and speculation. In addition, the rapid industrialisation of the United States, besides produc ing a steady movement of population to the cities brings about constat changes in market opportunities and necessitates readjustments in systems of farming and In sices of farms, while different classes of farmers in this country move considerable number from one agricultural status to 'an other. . Some shifting is more or less aim less, they concede but much of the fluidity represents desirable economio and social readjustment To Pay Common Btock Dividends. New York.—Directors of the South ern Railway; company* declared an initial dividend of |1.25 on the com mon stock. It was officially announced that the purpose of the directors hereafter i> to give consideration Quarterly to the matter of preferred as well as com mon dividends. The dividend was announced as a quarterly payment on the common stock.' ■ The directors also declared the regular semi-snnual dividend of 2 1-2 per cent on the preferred stock. The dividend is the first to be paid on the 1,200,000 common shares since the reorganisation of the road in 18*4. Beginning in 18*7 dividends on the preferred stock hare ranged from one to five per cent annually. —Three Found Murdered. Linden. N. T.—A'.man and twe women lered In a burning house here. The dead are Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Whaler and Mrs. Mabel Morse. Neigh bors saw flames coming from the win dows of the Whaler home and they succeeded In dlstinrulahing the lire. A seirch of the house disclosed thre* murdered persons. Girt"Kills rather.. Tampa, Fla. —"I stamped him ; to death with my feet." Thb was the unemotional statement made by *va Winchester, 18-year-old daughter of the dead man. J. E. Win chaster. M years old. formerly of Gas- N. C. His body was found at the home In Seffnflr. a village tea miles east of hare. The girl implicated her mother la the statement la Which she said she was ordered to kin her father by has mother. t Both an la the SXMty Jill hers charged with murder. CONDENSED NEWS FROM THE OLD NORTH STATE •HORT NOTE* OF INTfcK««T TO CAftOLINIA^ New Bern. —A meat curios plant in connection with one o( the local ice factories la the new enterprise which is planned here by Allle - Cook and Charlee A. Seifert, It was learned. Asheville.—Bryan Russell, 26, sur rendered to the sheriff at Henderson vllle, admitting that hq had shot and killed Willie Owenby,-22, in the woods near Fletcher, after Russell and a friend had come upon Owenby and Mrs. Russell. Dunn.—Paul Stewart, 13 year-old white boy. Is in the Dunn hospital with but slight chance of recovery from Injuries received when run down on the highway by a Ford car. He suffered a broken arm, concus sion of the barin, apd numerous oth er bruises and lacerations as a re sult of the accident. Wilson. —Wilson offered a 114 acrs tract of land Bltuated near the city limits to R. T. Fountain, of Rocky Mount, chairman of the commission 1 named by the Governor to look after the proposed site* for the Eastern Carolina Training School for Boys.- Wilmington.—Fifty pounds of dyna mite exploded In the hull of the water-logged schooner Josephine, which lies sunk in the harbor anchor age basin, caused many people in the city and on Eagles Island to believe that these parft had been shaken by I an earthquake. Hamlet.—Sam Odell, 33, mill oper > atlve of McColl, Is dead and Hobson Hlnes, 25, of Gates, is in the Hamlet hospital in a serious condition ad re sult of an accident when an auto truck In which they were riding lumped the Foverhead bridge on the Gibson road three miles from Hamlet. Trinity College, Durham. Two Trinity students were honored with elective offices in the recent meeting of the North Carolina Student Volun teer Union at Queen's College, Char lotte, N. C. J- H. Westbrook, Jr., 26, of Rocky Mount, was elected vice president of the union, and Miss Mar garet Frank, '24, of Mount Airy, was for the second successive time elected chairman of the health committee. Charlotte. —B. F. Roark, of Char lotte, was re-elected president of the North Carolina Retail Jewelers' Asso elation at the closing session of the annual convention here. Vice presi dents elected were: A. H. Hawkins, of Henderson vllle; C. P. Sellers, o( Henderson, and F. E. Starnes, of Albe marle. William G. Fraxler was re elected secretary and treasurer. Henderson. —The pace set by new construction work In this city during the month of Jsauary was almost s maintained In fuu by new enterprises launched during the month of Febru ary, according to reports made pub lic by Fire Chief M. H. Matthews, showing permits issiied during the menth. During February total new constructions for yrhlch. permits were Issued amounted to $63,242, compared to $56,000 In January. Dunn. —4 farmer who lives in Johnston county a few miles north of Dunn recently plowed np a pot which contained $2,800 in gold, accord ing to reports. The gold was bnried la a field which had been cultivated for several years. Up to this year the farmer had used a plug mule and had only v broken his land very shallow. This spring he bought a new mule and plow and started deep breaking. His plow struck the pot of gold and unearther It, according to the reports Greensboro. —Plans of J. T. More head of this city for the erection of a million dollar hotel here have pro gressed to the point that the architect plans have been approved by Mr. Merehead, who is now id New York, completing }ls financial arrangements. He will be joined there soon by Em matt Robinson who w,.. be associated with him in the hotel venture. Balfour. —Balfour mills have award ed contract to the General Electric company for motors, transformers and switch-boards; to Link Belt com pany for chain drives, and to Bahnson company for humlllfying equipment. Greensboro. —City council awarded a contract for laying 61 miles of sewer and water pipes to Paul Howard, a contractor now engaged in work here, for s2B2,flft>. The contract is said to be the biggeat water and Sewer job ever made in North Carolina. , Winston-Salem.—Jndge J. L. Webb presiding over Wilkes superior ?ourt, fixed of Mr* * ~ and two sons, Emory and Austin, and grandson. A. K. Lackey, at .110,000 each at habeas corpus hearing at Wllkesboro, the four defendants being charged wtth the murder of ex-Sher iff A. R. Lakey, of Yadkin county. AsheriUe.— I The annual convention of the American Business Clubs will be held in Ashevilie on April" 17, 18 and 19. Extensive preparations for the entertainment of the visiting delegates are being made by members of the local arrangements committee, of which Plott Boyd is general chairman Hamlet.—C. M. Baucom. aged 44 of l C try, and formerly of Hamlet,.shoi himself over the right temple with a jj smith and Wesson pinol here at 'the railroad yard office, and died al, moat laatantly. The cause I* un known. The coroner's Terdtct has not reach oil Rejuvenated Prominent retired merchant aayi he feel* like new man aiaee Tanlac relieved Urn of hia troa hies. Can now eutwalh men 20 yean younger. MRr r> R. E. Boyd, 50W Fourteenth St, N. W., Washington, D. C., for forty eight years prominent hardware mer chant In the national capital, but now retired, lends his name to further the cause of Tanlac. "Indigestion and stomach weakness of a very pronounced type had troubled me for several months prior to last October fifteenth," said Mr. Boyd, re cently, "but since that date the Tanlac treatment has made a new man of me. Now I eat heartily, never have a sign 4>f indigestion, sleep like a log, and get up mornings feeling like an athlete. Today I can outwhlk men twenty years younger. Tanlac alone put me in my present fine physical condition, en abling me tp get more real pleasure than ever before out of meeting and mingling with friends. Tanlac has re juvenated me completely, so to speak. It's tbe finest medicine I ever ran across." Tanlac is for sale by all good drug gists. Accept no substitute. Over 40> million bottles sold. Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills. To Study the 801 l Weevil To study the life history and be havior of tlie cotton boll weevil, a laboratory has been established by the United States Department of Agricul ture at Florence, S. C. 4 . Wrlsht'e Indian Vegetable Pill* are not only a purgative. They exert a tonic action on the dlfeatlon. Teat them yooraelf now. ITS Pearl St., N. T. Adv. » ' After half a . dozen personal scorch ings of hiß own, a man extenuates the misstep of others. » Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION ntjSJnjf] Hot water tifiCzZß=| Sure Relief bELLANS £ss AND 75j RCjCKAGES EVERYWHERE cop Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop & little "Freexone" on an aching corn, Instant ly that corn stops hurting, then short ly yon lift It right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of for a few cents, sufllclent to remove every hsrd corn, soft corn,' or corn between the toes, and the foot .calluses, without soreness or Irritation. 827 L u?? or Sr Ow Your Siring, with Jprm Cuticura/^j>
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 20, 1924, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75