Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / May 22, 1924, edition 1 / Page 7
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Stomach Trouble Can Be Corrected Quickly and Easily If the Stomach Is Upset and the Digestive System \ Is Not Working Properly One Cannot Hope to Feel Well and Strong. Many Complications Have Their Origin in an Upset Stom ach. TANLAC IS WORLD'S BEST TONIC FOR STOMACH TROUBLE . t _____ This Great Medicine Will Tone Up the System, Soothe an Inflamed Stony ach, Remove Accumulated Poison and Start the Di gestive Organs Function ing Properly, Thus Allow ing the System to Assimi late the Food One Eats— All Good Druggists Sell TANLAC Don't put things off--put them over. Cutlcura Soothes Baby Rashes That itch ud burn, by hot baths of Cutlcura Soap followed by gentle anointings of Cutlcura Ointment Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espe cially If a little of the fragrant Cutl cura Talcum la dusted on at the fin ish. 28c each.—Advertisement Empty wagons make the most noise. Piles Disappear Peterson's Ointment "Please let me tell you," says Peter ion, "that for Instant relief from the misery of blind, bleeding or Itching piles, there Is nothing so good as Peter son's Ointment, as thousands have testified." Best for old sores and Itch ing skin. All druggists, 35c, 60c. W^T%£OMPOUHP H pSIrJh For Eczema, Rheumatism, Gout or Hives Expensive health ratort*. sou (tit by thou sand*. have grown around springs coauln- I In* sulphur Hancock Sulphur Connaad. ntfUstn* th* secret of the famoua healing waters, makes M possible for you to enjoySulphurßath* la your own home, and at • nominal cost Sulphur, Nature'* best blood purfSer, I* prepared to aak* It* use most tacadous la Hancock Sulphur Compound DM It la the bath, at a loUoa applied to affected put*, isd take It Internally. 60c and SIJ2O the bottle. If ye«r drussUt can't (apply K. (end hli name and lidrw and the price In «t»wpt aadyre will tend you a bottle direct. ■AJfCOCK LI QUID ItTLTHUft COMPANY Itmml tultkmr Oh» /rH-|cV I ihiSJ 1 ! Ugm&i Cinfimui */ aX jr My Picbne on Every M Package P.D.Q.TO P. D. Q., a chemical (not an lpf / insect powder) that will ac- Wt/ tually rtd a houaa of Bed Bun, Roachea. Pleas and AnU » with It* proper ua«— Impoael- M ble tor them to exist aa It kill* their ana aa well and thereby atop* future generations. i A *c package make* a Quart. ■ Pre#—a patent spot la every ■ callona. Tour drurtlat has It or can set It tor yon. Mailed Mm EMUd upon receipt-of price fU the Owl Chemical Works, JP* » Haute, lad. W. N. «, CHARLOTTiL NO. JBHBKV. • Vi - L -J(C". IftJMO *Ht flowWe Cut Dur Local Taxes Instead of calling a mass meeting and denouncing the fsituation, we got the facts and did something about it. , ' t 'VT Y P IN Thurston Cfranty, In ■ 1. northwestern Nebraska. where, I live, we ih ave "Sr~7| found a wuy to cut our local taxes. It Is a very T simple plan, and one that you can easily apply in W your own community. W When the depression of * 1920-21 hit us we were In n Just about the same tax situation aa any other county in the Middle West We were really worse off because in 1020 our county suffered a cloudburst and scores of bridges were • destroyed and had to be rebuilt and paid for. Be fore I begin to tell about the remedy for the "tax disease" let me show right here at the start what the remedy accomplished: It saved the county around $90,000 on the one item of bridges alone. It secured ( cuts of from Bto 20 per cent In the local taxes in individual precincts. It Increased the amount of property returned from 12 to 20 per cent in years when the valuations were gen erally falling, thereby reducing taxes for the man who Sad always been honest In making his -return. Best of aU, the net result was a feel ing of confidence and general satisfac tion, instead of mistrust, unrest and suspicion. . .. , #».i -n'r'.i'ij'fi Here is how It was done: During the year or so that the de pression lasted In earnest, people tend ed to became radical. But being radi cal Is more or less a state of mind. When we began to get radical about our taxes. It simply meant that we didn't know where our money was go ing, and consequently dldi't know how to stop the money from going. A farmer would see the school ma'am spinning along In her jitney. "Well, looky there," he would exclaim, "that'i where all ojjr taxes gol" Another farmer a few miles further on would see the road graders at work. he would exclaim, 'Til bet that's tak ing all our taxes!" It all depended on which way a fellow looked as to what he blamed his taxes on. The fact was that most people didn't know. Ignorapce of where our money went bred suspicion and suspicion bred radicalism. A few people were already making themselves heard, when It was suggested that the farm bureau might take a look Into the matter. William Wlngett, president of the county farm bureau, and a little group on the tax committee were handed the Job. Some people were for calling a county-wide meeting to protest vigorously and nois ily against all manner of taxes. But before we had a public meeting it was considered proper for someone to find oat where our money did go. So we went over to the county offices and went through the books and deter mined Just what our money was being spent tor. And a little later we did this for every school district In the county. On this page Is reproduced the poster we got out showing what every man paid on SI,OOO actual valua tion In School District No. 18. There was not any hedging or gues»- lng, here was everything in black and white: $3.30 for state taxes,* $4.90 (or county taxes, $15.50 for school district No. 18, and se£o for the village of WaltbllL And each of these was subdivided off to show even somewhat minor ex penditures. At the flvst public meet- Ing there were around 150 farmers and a few busi ness men present We began to bold meetings all over the county, and at every meeting we passed around circulars that showed where the money went In that school dis trict. We bad wall charts and maps.. The upshot of all this wag that for the first time it suddenly dawned on people that 'most of the tax expenditures were for things directly under their control. Politicians bad sometimes talked aa If the state capltol, the state government.' the university and normal schools, the state Institutions for de pendents, state roads—as If these things were tak ing the money. But If we had cut out all of these things altogether where I lived. It would have de creased our tax bill only about 10 per cent. The largest expenditures were concentrated right down in BOAT CALLED ON TO SERVE TWO MASTERS Some years ago tnc.Yankee schoon er Susan Allen, under the command of Captain Sturgls. was beating up the Connecticut river. Mr. Collins, the mate, was at his ststlon forward. According to hit notion of things, the schoonenwas getting too near certain mod flats "which lay along the port dmfc- • , l ;»^ The mate went aft to u* cmptan. « 4 ucci: a «swa;# it .SK By H.L.KEEFE fivj/dmnt oflhrflchrojAa Male Farm durnu Fod»rmiion in *Jt Maryiet wHM T/t Crawford in Farm trFi'rssitim & ,>• •" • Katsfo these things out the attendance at the anritaal meet ings, of the school districts increased from four to five persons to forty or fifty. In some districts it was found that things had not been managed efficiently. In some cases It was found advisable to cut down on one teacher where she was teaching ouly a v4ry few pupils and increase the sire of classes for other teachers—al though in some cases the salaries of these other teachers had to be raised. In most cases these was also a dis position to 'economize on other/mat ters, such as the purchase of coal at the time of year when It was cheapest, etc.- In this way cuts varying from 8 to 20 per cent were effected in the taxes of individual districts. The next big thing was to discover hidden property which was escaping taxation throughout the county. Our tax system has always been so consti tuted that the man who Is honest about turning In his property at Its rightful value indirectly pays the tax of the man who Just forgets that he Is quite so well off when the tax assessor comes around. Tou know an assessor hates to raise a rumpus with his next door neighbor and too often a whole lot of things do not appear at all on the tax books. So the tax committee decided to give the community another shock, and something to talk about Pa r months afterward. We hired a couple of men to go down to the county offices and copy off of the books the amount of property which each man In the coun ty had turned In. We had blanks printed where each man's name eould be listed with the value of his cattle, horses, automobiles, Jewelry, In fact everything that he owned, according to the figures he had given the asses sor. These blanks were compiled with the names in alphabetical order. Then we proceeded to paste these blanks up In the postofflce, banks, stores, and other public places, right In the man's own community. Tou can imagine what Interesting reading HOW YOUR TAXES ARE SPENT Thurston County, Nebraska Taxes Paid on $1,000.00 Actual Valuation, In School District No. 13 $30.20 STATE TAXES . 3.30 $ (or Stat* Capitol $ Jl ........ tor Stat* Government .44 - ........ tor Stat* laatttatloaa N tor Stat* iUati, *ta. JM tor K4aeallo» 1.10 * Total ~,..$ aw COUNTY TAXES 4.00 VMtiU* tor Coaat j Oeacral ful S I.TI 17.SST.t3 tor Coaatr BrMct Faad JW MBMI tor Coaaf R«a4 Dlatrlet.... A» MBUI tor Unl Hm Dlatrlet...... AO 1.133L53 for BilMlif P»4 JW 1,13a58 (or Mather*' Peaaloajm unjg tor Cft Aarlealtaral Soetety.. .OS 23.450.4S tor OU IWlrMotana 1J« 4.451.51 tor Batriacr BrMgo Jl 4,401 SI (or Comrtr Bmt Ymm4 JS Sllo.oai.Sl Total SiM •88% o( the aaaoaat *t tax Inlet, which to th* baa la aa act by law (or loaalac warraataC BCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 13....l *14,978.41 (or Teaehara SI 1.47 ISXA3 tor Retain. JS SH4.S3 tot raol.. 4,\.. JM 100.00 (or Bo*ha. , t Mi 843.4S (or T»«t Itoka JS MJt (or Faraltar*. IT 14448 (or j(D «ther........... t " .11 tor 8aa*...;.; ass 535.53H.08 Total $ll.BO VILLAGE OF WALTHILL C9O Geaeral S 4SS Boa4a aa4 lat*r*at U« Total f SLSS TOTAL TAX $30.20 and. with his hat cocked on one aide, said: "Cap'n Sturgls, you're getting a leetle too dose to them flats. Hadn't ye better go about?" The captain stared at blm. "Mr/ Collins, jest yon go forward and tend to your part of the skunner. HI tend to mine." Mr. Collins went forward la high dudgeon. "Boys." be bellowed oat, "see that that' mndbook's all dear for letting go!" "Ay* in. str." THE ALAMANCE GLEANER, GRAHAM, N. C. they made. War bulleilns from the World war never proved half as In teresting. What do you suppose happened a year or so later? . » , our own com munities, in mat ters over whls» the people had the most intimate control th em selves. We found that there were wide variations In dif ferent parts of our own county, and that taxes in individual school districts varied all the way from $10.60 to $30.20 on SI,OOO valua tion. When people began to And The actual returns of, property In creased In the various precincts from 12 to 20 per cent, notwithstanding that It was between years when everything was supposed to be going down. This simply meant that the honest man had ceased to be penalized for being honest in turning In his property. There's one more chapter to our story. I mentioned to you that we were un fortunate enough to have suffered a severe cloudburst In 1920 which had wiped out several score bridges In our county. Following a county-wide In sistence on replacement the commis sioners declared an emergency levy for new bridges. Here Is where we saved around $30,000 and since have caused other counties to scrutinise matters of this sort more carefully. After the bridge contract had been let and the bridges were going In, there was a frequent allowing of county war rants on the contracts, In excess of funds on hand, and these warrants were naturally registered at 7 per cent Interest Finally these amounts grew to an excess of SIOO,OOO and people be gan to get a little alarmed. It appeared that there were no defi nite records available which showed just how things stood. Some of the county officials and taxpayers began-to ask how an accounting, mlgfet be se cured. When the farm bureau took hold of the matter there had been a rather tentative aettlement on sixty completed bridges on which the total cost ap peared at $181,888.77. ▲ reduction of $8,228.92 had been made from this amount and warrants to the amount of SIOI,OOO Issued, leaving a balance of $22,671.85 unpaid jp these particular bridges. The farm bureau appointed a com mittee of sixteen taxpayers to Investi gate the matter. An engineer from the State department was secured. .During five days more than eighty bridges were visited. Bolts, washers, and it might even be said spikes and nails, were counted. Then the charges made by the bridge company were carefully checked. In some cases where the bridge company appeared to have charged-too little, something was added, but In most *cases deduc tions were made. Here the deductions exceeded what was added by $7,808.- 50. Bear in mind that we were not finding any fault with the bridges but only with the cost. The bridge com pany agreed to this reduction. A little later we discovered state ment* tor twenty Incomplete bridges. We went through these In the same way and here we made a net redac tion of $6,129.47. The bridge com pany again promptly agreed to having this reduction allowed. And then we were able to secure an other reduction of Ul,- 570.08, bees use we were able to snow that the cost of material had come down since the first of the bridges was built Thl« made a total of BB,- 588.87. Since our bridge experi ence other counties In Nebraska have been doing some checking up and we have been building -com* of our own bridges. Qur experience shows, I think, that people In the county should take some thing more than a merely perfunctory Interest In their tsx affairs. Ton de termine your own taxes. If you check up to see what you are spending your money for, either you are going to admit that you are satisfied or you are going to find a way to make a induction. The biggest thing that we accomplished In our connty was not Jthe saving of more than SBO,OOO on the bridges nor the cuts In taxes In the various school districts, nor the resurrection of much hid den property. The big gest thing wss that the people found out that the question of taxes rested with themselves. "Ut go, then," be roared. Dowa went the anchor, out rattled the chain*, and like a flaah tbe Susan Allen came lolling Into tbe wind, and then brought op all standing. Mr Collins walked aft and touched bit hat "Well, eap'n; my part of the *kturner Is to anchor."—Kansas City Star. At Washington, D. Cw. la winter there are twice as many dost particles In tbe air aa.thara are t* summer^eexeaats by the weather barear show. K1 ©. 1(14. WMtinrttiMptftr Vn^n.) WEEKLY MENU SUGGES TIONS To begin the day, a little season able fruit Is enjoyed. Oranges, grape fruit, apples, prunes, bo minus are all good, giving u* enong" of a vnrloty. SUNDAY Break Ast: Cinnamon rolls, bacon and eggs. Dinner: Chick en pie, mashed potatoes. Bupper: Sandwlcheo, lettuce salad. MONDAY Breakfast: Buckvfcljsat caksa, sausage. Dinner: Ham souffla, escalloped potatoes. Bt»pper: Onion And apple salad. TU ES DA Y—Breakfast: Baked po tatoea, drawn butter sauce. Dinner: Stuffed, baked calvea' hearta, boiled onions. Supper: Omelet! WEDNESDAY Breakfast: Bollsd rice with cream. Dinner: Broiled steak, baked bananaa. Supper: 'Eng lish drop cakea. THURSDAY —Breakfast: Graham gema, doughnuts. Dinned Apple dump lings. Bupper: Cookies, canned pears. FRlDAY—Breakfast: Eggs on toast. Dinner: Potatoea baked In half ahell. Supper: Fish salad. BATURDAY—Breakfast: Orangss, oatmeal, cream and iugar. Dinner: Veal roaat, basted with pickled peach syrup. Supper: Graham bread, canned atrawberrlea. Ham Bouffle. Take a cupful of cold, cooked, ctiopped ham, one-half cupful of bread trumhs, three eggs, a pint of milk, pepper and suit to taste. Beat the eggs, mix the Ingredients thoroughly, and buke twenty minutes In a moder ate oven. Serve with tomato sauce. Canned tomato soup mskes a very good sauce, savlAg time, when that Is to be considered. Baked Bananaa. 811ce bananas lengthwise, lay In a well-buttered pan,'sprinkle with lemon Juice, butter and add a bit of water, bake until well done. Serve as a garnish to the broiled steak. Fish Salad. Cook together over hot water a tablespoonful of flour, a teaspoonful each of salt, mpstnrd, sugar and melted butter, a dash of cayenne and one third of a cupful of mild vinegar, the beaten yolks of tvo eggs. Stir until smooth, bent with an egg heuter while cooling. Separate int* small flnkes any cold flsh, add a little lemon Juice and let stand one hour. Stir with a fork, ndd the "dresatag -with half a cupful of whipped cream. Place In small molds If desired, chill and serve garnished with lemon allces and parsley. Luck means the hardships and privations which you 'have not hes itated to endure; the long nights you have devoted to work. Luck mesne the appointments you have never failed to keep; the trains you have never failed to catch. —Mas O'Rell. EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS A most delicious dltih of ham and potntopp may be prepared as follotoa: Hm * Bc *' brown. Serve from the dish In which It win baked. Jellifd Prunes. —Pick over, wash and ■oak one-third of a pound of prunes In two cupful* of cold water and cook In the aaioe water until soft; remove the prunes, stone and exit Into quarters. To the prune water add enough boiling wa'er to make two cupful*. Soak twp and one-half tahlespoonfuls of granu lated gelatin In one-half cupful of cold water, dissolve In hot llquld f> add one cupful of sugar, one-fourth cupful of lemon Juice,' then strain, add the prunes, mold snd chill. Stir twice while cooling to prevent pruuea from settling. Bread Pudding.—Pour a quart of seeded milk over two cupful* of stale bread crtimhs, let stand fifteen min utes. Add Ibe yolks of two egg*. two tahlespnonfuls of butter, n grating of nutmeg and one-half cupful of ftugar. then fold In the *tJflly-beaten whites of the ta ten. a half cupful of ral*ln*. turn Into a buttered baking dl*h and bake until firm. Serve with a hard inure. Oatmeal Bread.—Add two cupful* of boiling water to one cupful of oatmeal and let stand for on* hour; add one cupful of molaasea, (inr-half ten*poon ful of salt, one-hall* of a yeast cake dissolved In one-half cupful of luke warm water and fous cupful* of bread flour; lei rise, beat thoroughly, turn Into buttered bread pans, let ri*e again and bake. Cheese and Cherries. —A delldoos filling for windwYche* Is crenm cheese nod chopped mnrnschlno cheri-fen. add ing a bit of (he liquor to make of the right con«l*rcncy to spread. Cottage Pudding With Chocolate Sauce.—Prepare the pudding by creaming two-third* of" a cupful of sogar with three tsbleftpoonfols of hotter, add a beaten egg. one cop ful of flour alfted with tiro teaapooo fula of baking powder and alternate the floor with one-half cupful of milk. Beat well and bake In a small ■hallow nam. Serve with choroiati ■a ace. "HcXUc HOUSEWORK NOT DBMD6EBY For Women In Good Health Read How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable . Compound Changed Conditions For These Housewives • ; | 4 Bade Don't Bother Me Now " I little boys and make my garden. I X iMiln VT.Kro.t. »U. V.--V .* I Other* Wfaat the Luvcoln, Nebraska. My back medicine has done forma. I think it Volj»Cttr.low«. Ido and four babies to take care of so p iv, * _ #«. « when I heard of Lydia E. Pinkham'a *-* n Uo ABJ Ivind Of Work Vegetable Compound I took it and I Fouke, —«j had the TV feel better. My back dop't bother and after that I had a pain in my IMb me and I can eat mora and work. I and was not able to do my work Iwm do all my housework and washing for so weak. I found an advertiaeaasaa six iq the family. I will tell other in a paper and it told what Lydfe women to take the Vegetable Com- E. Pinkham'a Vegetable friiniiiiiMi pound and you may publish my let- would do, and I took it Now I caa ter."—Mrs. CHARI.KB F. Dolezal, do any kind of work I want tax. I 1201 Garter Ave., Lincoln, Nebraska, think every family ought to keep ft In the house til the time and I intcni Felt Bettor At Onco todosa"—MtjDohaPhiltaw,B-K. whatfjydlali. Ow 100,000 woman have aa tm Compound did for me. 'I was all ran repllsd to oar question. "Have yen down and eoald hardly be on my feet £?®S} T ?d benefit from taking Imi I was ao cold I could not kaep warm. E- Pinkham a Vegetable CompnoMt* I had numb feelings and then heat M ner cent at " renUsa ■— flashes would pass over my body. I "Yea/' S/SXSTI «W This shows that 96 ootof evsrylflt women^^SkatttobaaS/S band got me a bottle of the Vegeta- mended are benefited by it. ble Compound and I began to feel This goes to prove that a medicftaa better aa soon aa I started taking it specialised for certain definite sA- I have taken it off and on for three ments—not a cure-all—can and does yeara now. I keAp booae and do all do good work. For aale by draggWa my work for my husband and two everywhere^ A wise man jever trusts any one Some folks never expect to . JSI who trusth luck. * ( > what they expect MOTHER:- Fletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substi tute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Sjrups, prepared for Infants jn anna and Children all ages. To svoid imitations, always look lor die signature of Proven directions on esch packsrt. lyWiM Hft When a fool holds his tongue he isn't as foolish as he might be. 4P«€lff* Km UMOfWMm Ssllstss Wis IKssisisMse. Hsfclna saS IrHWha WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND aaaay **-■*—'■ SWAMP-ROOT sWs sr tr— U» SHUPTWIII CO.. WWCS[ For many years druggists have watched Genuine In proved Naacy Hal msA «rith much interest the remsrkable record P_-»« ri.a ».■.>. m - • maintained by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, _ PorU RUA PoUto PU " U the great kidney, livsr and biaddsr medi- cH.n^r Cine. four hiiadrad thirty-thrae biutula par esse It is a physicisn's prescription. '>•' *•**■ Pi*"'" srowo from Wo. 1 i nita Swamp-Root is a strengthening medi- JthSr ViantToT^m/iaAltV eine. ft helps the kidneys, liver and li.n par thousand. Orders eaa Sa SIM Madder do the work nature intended they a * T **«s«ved. should do. VICTO* DKKN, AI.IU, OA. Swamp-Rootna. stood the test of year. Btru*. p.raly.* hi.h Maaa It is sold by all druggists on its merit snd preaSsra, heart. Uvar. kidney, atomack triaSki it should help you. No other kidney medi- »'thout madlolna. J. U. noyd. BitoWMtaSi eine hss so many friends. riaot Sweat ratatees la An tms Be sure to get Swamp-Root snd start asd back yards. Oenulna Impnat Sne treatment at oaee. •» K° rl °. ?1?°. Fol i u> .. p !t mm; fS? Mrrmrmm* 11 —|.L . . .... Inspected. chemically treated, lilt per ussa. ncrwever, u you wish first to test this Prepd. Orders shipped flay reed dariassna peat preparation, send ten cents to Dr. i»s naaeon. victor riant Co., Rockia«hai.aa Kilmer t Co., Binghamton, K. Y., for a ■■ ■"■ him K ' * sample bottle. Whsn writing, be sure CwkC Ul In I 7 . and mention this paper.—Advertisement. C p The fewer acquaintances a man has Fc^ the less he is bored. Es3s3sEsi»s&i p rt . , F . arm !l w,nt *f & Particularly tobacco farmers, in Wayne Cou-Jty, Georgia.' Healthful ell- — : ■ mate, fertile soli, splendid rallroaA fa- DITCMTO aeSIauSS'SIrtISSJSSa cllltles, fine schools, churches, and good |AI Lll 10 **V —• neighbors; lowest-priced lands. For Booklet ran. r*J?C^V«TC.wi*2!2sl farm lands, or factory sites address —-—-—c of Trade, Jesup, (ja.— Advertisement. Wanted—Young Mea — to enroll now for the spring teem. Men's maxims reveal their hearts. n..Xj« T rnflsae. f I LDOUGLAS mi *7.°°anJ *S SHOES J3»B8« Hp: at {j-OQ ami * 6.00 - Boy d*4jo 6 W. L. Douglas Shoes ars sold In 120 of our own storss In tha principal citiss and by ovtr 8,000 shoo dealsrs. wKB WHEREVER you live, demand W. L. f&SkwjUuj O .wWV JTaKffl. Douglas shoes.They are high-class and u f H cQt\i u 1 I tolate ' made in all the popular styles L J that appeal to men and women who want stylish and serviceable shoes at reasonable prices. have you had the opportunity to buy such wonderful shoe values as you will InCSfefiW W- L Douglas $7.00 and dfe* cwg* It' SB.OO dioes In our retail stores and and Supports Xnk. 9WJSO wk in good shoe itores everywhere. Only by P , „ „ m them can you appreciate Ujg ECONOMY and dependable 4wM J* {. value, wear shoes thathave W.L. f gQPf A popular Douglas name and the retail KVjPLap^KB Bimm stamped on the soles. & not far sale m your vicinity, ft ifcg write for Illustrated Catdt, K3WBI Calf. im3 cydct. Bach showing how to older shoes by maiL LL£JL™?gB" sood nlut 9740 WJ.l>m^ii>iiC»^mfHc.fcwtf.M l Sues, attmsmmSSSw BLANKETS Cleansed and refinished—original softness renewed by special process. SI.OO per pair. THE CHARLOTTE LAUNDRY, CHARLOTTE, N.C.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 22, 1924, edition 1
7
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