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H8ine;Newapaper Published in tlie Interest of thei?eopiQ and for. Honesty in Governxnental Afifairs.
VOL. VI.
NO. 24.
SalisburyI NlO., pVEbjiEScY, Jdi,
I9JP1
vvm. Hi Stewart Editor.
-ViF
Vr t 'ill lie. fiSi
w ,u f : vr. a 11 r , '
4
MR. JAFT FEELS INJURED.
Especially Distressed bf Suggested Re-
$ flsnlinh Jtn Cnathnrn llAnHalilu. .
Washington, May 27. "In all
-my experience, and
S ' J T 1
i nave
enjoy-
ed thB hospitality of many seb-
tions and countries of the world.
never4 had a more cordial; gen
erous or. open and lasisk welcome
than I had in the Southern Statei
widuring my trip and the slightest
hint that puts me in the attitude
" of a critic of that hospitality
ogives me great pain."
This in part is the manner in
which President Taft today in a
-letter to Chairman Tawney of the
Jlouse committee on appropna-tions-
deeply resented criticisms
-passed by Democrats in the debate
in th&" House yesterday upon the
traveling expenses of the Presi
dent i t
The President says ,he is espe
cially distressed by "suggested
reflection on Southern hospitali-
- President Taft's letter con
tinues: - .
' . lI am deeply grieved over the
phase which the discussion of the
appropriation for the traveling
expenses of the President took
' yesterday. I think, it is a legiti?
mate argument in favor of Bucb
u appropriation that Congress
men and many others press the
acceptance of invitations to visit
their sections and districts, be
"cause thejEirgency of suckrequtsts
indicates the opinion pn the part
of the people that one of the du
ties of the President is to visit
vcthe people iu their homes. $ "
i4Bat the intimation or v sugges
tion that the acceptance by Con
rgressmen of the President's invi
tation to travel on the train with
ihiijnitrtbeir respective- districts
or States was a reason why they
should not vote their, free opinion
on the question of such an appro
priation is to me a most painful
- . ohei v Iu traveling upon "the train
they were ribt ' receiving my hos
pitality they were only making
a little more elaborate the cordial
weloome which they as Represen
tatives of their districts wished
to give."
"The feature of the discussion
yesterday which was especially
distressing to me was a sad re
flection on Southern hospitality.
The intimation that somewhere
in the South board was oharged
- has no foundation in fact, and I
never heard it intimated until I
saw it in this morning's paper."
f, Following the receipt of Presi
dent Taft's letter, Representative
Tawney issued a statement Bay-
ing:
"It is ridiculous to suppose that
I would reflect privately, much
less publicly, upon the floor of
the House of Representatives, up
on Southern hospitality, which is
proverbial and that which as
can say from experience there is
nothing more cordial or more gen
ere us to be imagined. But
agree with the statement of Pres
ident Taft in his letter to me to
day, that 'it is a legitimate argu
ment in favor of snch an appro
priation tnat Uongreesmen ana
, many others press the acceptance
of invitations to visit their sec
tions and districts, because the
nrgenoy of such requests indicates
the opinion on the part of the
people that one of the duties o
. -a . .
tue rresident is to visit tne peo
pie in their homes.
"I had spoken of a man who
would ask the President to be his
..- cues t,s;. entertain .himAnd 4hen
3 criticize him for making the visit
ia' effect 'charging him board?
?Mr. Bartlet of Georgia, evidently
misunderstandiug my remark,-
Itnien demanded to Know ot
a
gsipgle
instance where the Presi-
ident was charged board and Rep-
resentative Hamer of Idaho, be-,
1? fore I could reply, injected the
facetious i commeut s t h a t he
lithought it was in Georgia.
f Of course the President was
!n0ver charged for his board when
gthe guest of any one in Georgia
gotj anywhere else, arid 'no such
allegation was made."
& .
:Tbose unsightly pimples and;
liblptchesl External applications
may partially hide them, out Hoi-
ilister's Rocky Mountain Tea re.
Imoves themr kelpi. Gei a
lithe causemWeblood ea or
fUNuggets (table form) 85o at Cor
InelisoQ & Cook's,
WHAT THE TARIFF COSTS.
The Individaal Pays $16.50 to the Govern-
i meat and $94.50 to tne. Trysts.'
Washington, May SO. Special.
One hundred and thirty-three
millions of dollars I
Tryto comprehend the magni-
ude of this sum if you can, and
then pau99- and reflect over the
act that it is the amountrthe Sen
ate has voted to spend on the
navy in a single year, and in a
time of profound peace.- Then
consider that only 12 years ago, in
898, the naval appropriation was
but $33,003,234, or , one hundred
millions less than the amount ap
propriated for the coming year.
A fact in connection with this
awful increase which the publio
seldom hears is tbal .every penny
of this $100,000,000 which is to
be spent in excess of "the amount I
used in 1898 comes from the peo
ple; not from the rich, but large-
y from the working men and wo
men .
It is the ultimate consumer
who pays the battleship bills, who
maintains an ever-increasing army
officeholders in Washington,
and who meets the one-hundred-
and-oue extravagances of the gov
ernment. He does it. by paying
excessive prices for the things he
buys.
The government raises practi-
cally all of its funds through the
customs houses and the internal
revenue xffices, where taxes are
evied on things eaten, irorn or
used by the people. 'When the
consumer purchases a protected
article, and practically all of the
necessaries of life are protected,
he pays the real or natural value
of the article and in addition
thereto the amount of the tariff
tax. .'?.v'"ri
The more battleships construct
ed, the greater the amount the
government must raisd through
the tax; on ponsump$ion, and the.
greater thaoost of'living.
Thus it is not so strange that
under the Taft administration,
which is spending more than twice
the auount used by Cleveland to
fun - the government, the cost of
living is 50 per oent. greater, than
While the hat, coat lind shirt of
the mawes are taxedt almost 71
per cenfito build il,(X).000 bat- that as a compromise the investi
tlesliipB; and keep an extravagant gating committee will not only
governmentCiri spending money, whitewash Ballinger, but will
MessrsAliockefelrer, Morgan et al..
are notasked by the federal gov-
eminent to pay any tax whatever
on their swollen fortunes.
Wealth escapes tearing its just
share of "the burden "of taxation
because of the absence of a fed-
eral income or inheritance tax,
such as were long ago adopted L y
Great Britain, Germany, France,
Japan. Holland, Australia, Den-
mark, Switzerland, Australia and
New Zealand
A majority of both branches of
Congress were in favor of tacking
an income tax clause to the new
tariff law. Buch legislation
would now be on the statute books
had not President Taft and Sen
ator Aldrich defeated the project
by substituting a corporation tax.
That the necessary three-fourths
of the state legislatures will not
vote to amend the constitution is
now practically certain, which
means that an income tax can
only be sejured at the hands of a
Democratic administration.
- It ir estimated that in 1908 the
cost of living was nearly 12 per
cent, higher than' it would . have
been without a tariff. Herioe,
calculating that the average fami
ily consumed $931 worth of sup
plies peri annum, its increased
payment on account of the tar.ff
Vaa $111. 1 Of this $111, $16.50
went to the gvernmuit in collec
tions, and $94 50 went to the,
trusts in high prices.-- Of this
$94 50, $9.25 was on the woolens,
- .u ti? 1.1 .iiu:
$6.25 on furniture, $4.25 on beef
adlbautton-arid pork, $10.25 on
building materials and so on.
In 1910, the costcf livine beine
I j .. . - j . 1QAf
fI TOt iVJP
Averageifamily-pays $l680v of
- wmon iu per cent., or $108, is
' I is tribute to the tTustB and othr
PROHIBITION MAKES 600D SHOWING.
Some Figures that Show tne Improvement
? - In Society During th9 Past Tear; ;
A comparison ? of the police
records during the year 19081 and
rand 1909, before and after the
prohibition victory in. May, 1908,
the" following figures show 'oon-
clusively, if one is too dull to see
fit otherwise,: to what extent pro-
hibition prohibits. These figures
show that only the first step has
been taken. The next step will
be to elect officers whofwill not
grant near beer liceuses and clnb
and the next will be to prevent
the shipment of whiskey into dry
territory. These steps taken and
then we can begin to see our way
out of the woods.
' The figures mentioned above
were taken from the court
records Salisbury and are as fol-
lows: -The number of warrants
issued for 1908 were 1,317; and
for 1909, 625, making 698 less
arrests during the prohibition
year. An exchange gives the fol
lowing in regard to Asheville;
"Fines, penalties and costs col
lected by the Asheville police
court for the ytar ending May 1
amounted to 119,109.06. The
past year there were 789 arrests
for drunkenness as against 787
the year previous and 1,425 two
years .ago, the' last year of
saloons."
protected industries.
"Here is a little table which
speaks for itself. It compares the
expenditures on the army an navy
in a period of peace with amounts
expended for features of 'civil es
tablishment: .
EXPENDED SINCE 1897.
For rural free de-
livery.
For rivers and har
bors,
173,755,313
296,075,191
For publio build
ings and grounds, 128, 172,497
For the navy; 1,12610,193
For the army, 1,044,101,188
The exposure of Ballioger's se
cret relations with George W.
Perkins, of J. P. Morgan& Co.,
in Alaskan matters, has started
reportB that the usefulness of the
present secretary of the interior
to even the land grabbers has
been destroyed. It is anticipated
enamel mm as wnue as ine iaay
of spotless town, and that in ac
knowledgement of this courtesy
he will hand in his resignation.
President Taft. in an interview
printed in the June McClure's,
praises Aldrich to the skieB and
says "there were not a few reduc
tions iu the tariff schedules which
were introduced at his instance,
or with his consent ." In other
words, concessions in legislation
which was to affect the cost of
livine to 90,009,000 Americans
could only be had with the "con
sent" of a political boss, and that
political boss the acknowledged
representative of tariff trusts and
Wall Street millionaries !
"We all know that Taft will be
renominated. That is inevita
hie," says the Washington Pest,
whioh in the National Capitol is
considered by many to be an
administration mouthpiece
There is little doubt but that
the stand-patters still seriously
consider Taft the logical caudi
date in 1912, and it tney are m
the majority ifl Congress'fter the
approaching Congressional eke
tions are over, the President will
have little or no difficulty in se
curing the nomination if he de-
Bites r it. It . is understood
in: many quarters tua& ice
.-5 " ""- A. L. i. A W.
promise of '& renomination
was the price paid by the powers
that-be lor the Presidential signa
ture to the upward revision tariff
bill . Tavenner.
had eczemft on my faoe for ovor
four years. We tried ab mi a half
dozen doctors, but nev r found
any core. 1 have .b-en taamg
.Hollistes Rcky Mduj3taiu Ta
4bSu three4 mbntfis and it tat
eelnore "goM than all the
doctors' me Jiciue." Corneiison
r& Cook!
OPENING
Mounds 1 Containing " 0eir h0ne ' Hundred
Skeletons. Victims of aatle Ages ago,.
Lumberton, May S7i-r-Last week
Dr . J. WV clTeilnd Profl
Charles Peabody joi Harvard
University, who are ntere.sted in
arcbaeoiogicardis:ovelpies in Cum
berland county ; pawed- through
Hope Mills on? theirV.way. to the
Davis bridge,' about- six miles
from Hope Mills, bo 'engage in.,
excavating thje Urge v Indiau
mounoT near, that posiit. Six or
eight men were letufed (tbidb the
work of. excavatiuirid. as the
mound is SO feet. wiae and "nearly
as longhand mioi folie li
will take several days work 'to
reach all parts of itV A number
of skulls and boneai have been
uncovered, and iWis estimated
that fully one hundred 4snd fifty
Indians were buried" here long
before the advent of the white
man. A pipe maae oi a suo-
stance that looks ikeoapstone,
and a well-define'd tcMahawi were
also found.
There are" a "number
of Indian mounds in; this county,
and most of them are a familiar
to Dr. McNeill, :whGtatvbeenv in
V9stigating the mounds for several
years
In one era vfDr,, McNeill
'found where more than "one huri
dred Indians
hadeen
buried,
evideutly the. victims
ot a jan j
guinary battle . One of the skulls I
still had a tomahawk sticking
in it, wnue tnerei were arrow i
heads in a number f.; the skeleM
tons, showing that they had been
thrown into the gravjj.as they fell
on the battlefield i with the
weapons that causeo)' their death
remaining in their bj6diies.-Char-
lotte Observer.
A Woman's 6rejpdoa
is how to make herself attractive.
But, without healthV.it is ;iiard
ful; w?uu" uorLV2jVrL
rr'r:
woma3-ill'4e sorvb airiti&ancliaeut:JMC .ColJeg&Ut Thyatita in 1782 .
ible . Coustipation and Kidney j
poisons show in pimples, blotches,
skin eruptions and a wretcned
complexiod: But Electric Bitters
always prove a godsend to women
who want mealth, beauty and
friends. They reeutat9 Stomach.
Liver and. Kidneys, purify the
blood : give strong nerves, bright
eyes, pure breath, smooth, velvety
skin, lovely complexion, good
health. Trv them. WJc at All
Druggists.
Walter U. I5eamister, a
orominent member of : the
Newton bar, will deliver the
memorial address at Chestnut
Hill cemetery, on Woodmen
Memorial day, Sunday, June
12th. Mr. Feamister is said
to be an excellent speaker
and a larsre crowd will turn
out to hear him.
We Don't Hare to
Tell you what it's for, it's name
tells. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey
is the best cough medicine and se
veral million people already know
it . Look for the Bell on the Bot
tle.
Quarterly Meeting at Faith E. L. Church.
The quarterly meeting of the
Woman's Home and Foreign Mis
sionary Society of the Faith E . L
church, will be held in the church
Sundav niizht. June 5th, at 8
o'clock. A program of interest
ing exercises has been arranged
consisting of addresses and reci
tations. The public is cordially
invited to attend. J. C. L
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Con
tain Mercury,
ag mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and completely
ransa the whole system when-en-
terine.it through the .mucous iur
faces. Such articles should never
be used except on .prescriptions
from reputable' physicians! as the
damatze thev will do is tenfold to
the good you can possibly j derive
from-them. Hall's Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
Co,. Toledo, O., contains no mer
curv. and is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood fcnd
mucous surfaces of the system
In buying Hall's Catarrh pure be
sarp y ,u get the genuine, j i is
taken internally snd made in To
ledo, Ohio, by FsJ..Cheney &Co,
Testim )uial freS, I m
"Sold Jy tprgglsts. Price 75o.
per bottle .
Take Hail's
Family Pills if or
constipation.
4
Items of!lnt8rest In Various Neighborhoods
ryva iSiiA-liifcjPii We4$.l f
. ! i ? ,ROCKWILLf ? , ; . ' :
. May . 80, It looks, as if the
mumps will soon disappear, as no
new 'cases are reported' lately
Clarence Peeler came home last
Week. H has. been traveling for
the .Rookwell Furniture Company
for the last while and is doing a
good business as a salesman. v
tr lr i a.? - r- l j tt
jfixiisi maisie raimer ana xieury
Park were married last Tuesday
eviiafing'r c 5Mr . Park is the son of
eorge Park, .who lives near Rock-
well, and is a young man of great
abilities Miss Palmer3 is" the
daughter of Daniel Palmer, who
live! near New London . Both are
well known and their many
friends uish them a happy life. '
Luther Shive returned home
last Thursday evening from near
Harri8burg; Vwhere he had been
"working. C T -
I notice Henry Shive is visiting
quite often near Rockwill. I guess
he means business.
The Barringer Manufacturing
Company has shut down for good
and, will riot run. any more until
in the fall.
jSl'domestio
plnb has been or
gahized here.
Miss Lucy Fesper-
nan was elected: manaser.
An
htertainnient will be eiven later
Lewis -Holshonser, of China
GroveV" visited his father, Craw
lord HoldshouBer, last week.
TwbtMormon elders visited our
tqwn-and distributed bpoks and
Othec literature.
G. H; Sifford went to. Salisbury
last Satordar. ' 4
Quito a number of our people
'cvaA
thiseek.
v
The Rockwell first and second
nines played;a game of base ball
( last Saturday afternoon a week.
The acore stood nineteen to eight
in favor of th9 first team. It was
.quiet game. .
M. Luther Fesperman, who has
been" sick for the last Week or
moie, is aoie to oe up again
Uncle Bill,
JACKSON COLLEGE.
Gold Hill, Rural No. 1, May
27. The health of this commun
ity is very good. at this. time.
The wheat is looking as though
harvest would be here soon.
'The recent raid helped our cot
ton and corn considerably.
Levi Trexler has iust finished
painting his residence.
, . - -i - m
Samuel Bame has also painted
his residence,
J . G. Moose, mail carrier on
rural route No. 1, Gold Hill,
comes around promptly every day.
Ha never varies more than two
minutes of the bame time each
day.
George M. Hoffman visited at
Beniamin filler's Sunday even-
w
ing, accompanied by the writer.
Sammy Morgan visited Jas. H,
Morgan Sunday night.
Quite a large orowd visited the
sineine at Samuel Bame's Sunday
evening.
All report a nice time
and some good Binging.
Zebulon Morgan visited Sam
uel Bame Sunday evening.
W. D. Morgan visited down on
Panther Creek recently.
Jno, F. Morgan has recently
purchased a fine horse .
C . Frankie Morgan and family
isited at Ivev O. Morgan's Sun
day evening.
Grant Trexler and Callie Kluttz
visited Clarence Morgan Thursday
night, . .,; ? 1 ii - i
MiBB Maud Hoffman, who is ill,"
does not seem to improve.
Mr. and Mrs. Cai File, of
C0UNTRYC0RRESPOMDEMCE
uDennuAiii, Tuisoa j.
Hoffman's Wednesday night.
nvo l-43J i Northerner
...
Chestnut Hill, visited at W. Ct
- IilBEBTY. - : ;
May 23. Miss Maude Hoffman
is still very ill with consumption.
O. A. Campbell, who was re
ported as suffering from lumbago
in the last issue, is better, wet are
glad to note: " '
There will be preaching at Lib
erty church on the 1st Sunday in
June, at 3 p, m. Everybody iB in
vited. BEWEDIOT PfiTAIGtE .
CHINA GROVE.
Will Carter, went fishing a few
days ago and caught some fine
fish just below the old Fisher mill.
One cat fish weighed three pounds
or more.
Mrs. M. J. Smith spent a few
days in Greensboro last week vis
iting her daughter.
F. J. Bostian, who has been
having chills, id improving.
Henry A. Boitian, Jr., was in
Salisbury last Friday.
CLEVELAND.
Fred N McLauglin, on Sun
day, May 29th, has corn in silk.
This is unusually early.
The Baker mill dim has been
rebuilt and the old mill still
grinds wheat and corn for the
neighborhood,
Wheat is ripening fast and will
turn out a fairly good yield . All
other crops except cotton seem to
be doing very well
Robert A. McLaughlin, one of
the best farmers in this section,
says he will ''have 100 bushels of
plums this spring.
Old Third Creek Presbyterian
Church, near here, was established
in 1778, 187 years ago . It is one
of the oldest, . if not the oldest
in the county. However there are
ancesters of James. Knox Polk,
nth president of the United
who died and were
buried
Worth Plyler, of Salisbury,
spent Sunday here with relatives
Mr, and Mrs. Chas.' Fleming
spent Sunday at Woodleaf.
STRAWBERRY VALLEY.
Quite a number of visitors call
ed at F. M. Tyack's Sunday.
Among them were Messrs. N. G.
Arey, JV. V. Eller and iLuther
Eagle, with their families, and
Paul you know.
Miss Maud Hoffman is lying
very low with consumption. She
has been seriously ill for some
time.
j . -
We regret that our esteemed
correspondent, Sam, did not
rightly comprehend our statement
that a certain party was fishing
Ascension day. We think any
cologned, sen-sened and hair tal
lowed young man is fishing,
whether it. be for water animals or
not. Because one happens to be
at a ferry, it is not entirely neces
sary to expeot one to call his catoh
fish.
Blackberry time and : harvest
will soon be the order in our com
munity.
The readers of The Watchman
doubtless remember a recent item
from the Hill to the affect that a
: 1
'But In Club" was to be 'organ
ized in our neighborhood. That
correspondent's decision, some
think, is that a more suitable lo
cation is near uacrgan -a. rtoaas,
others say that that is only
a
branch, while West , Blacksmit
Street is headquartersr Urabbus
we appeal to you for explanation
so that you may be readily found
1. e. if you want any members.
Among, other home-corn
18
Zeb Trexler, from1 the" MbtrntaiL.
school. The Park -Inhone! line
will resume operation y
Liberty abd Gold Knob played
a match the 21st. Liberty clean
ed them up 15 to 9 . -These teams
are expectingsto cros9b'ats again
June 4tb. i - r
There will be an all day mis
sionary service held at theGold
HULHoliness r ohurclj Sunday.
Thtf chudreij-i partiQi)4t.
fi
- Reedy3ranohwiH4othave "a
- i-o.- ;: - '-.-it-.;; VU-siy1
real bice' time," but a'reel ti:.: 3 if
he -t keeps ;the: did "folkr awake
again. . ..-r c.
The agitation, homifioation,
distracition, abomination and de
struction caused by Halley's com
et will soon be over for ' thit gen
eration, at least we think.
t
I am glad to see another corres
pondent . " But I hope he will not
be too wild. ' Start ' 'your1 'frame
upon a tame 'and honored name.
Come along with, your com
ments boys, OzABBYITtfH.
-
EAST 8PEN0KB.
Engineer Baxter , Sowers of
East Spencer, is threaten, (with
appendicitis; and Mrs,: powers it
quite ill., i , ,
Alderman C. E. Kneeburg, has
materially improved his residence
. . i t . I ! 1 t J','-
Thursday evening, on the Luth
eran Church: lawn, beginning ' at 5
o'clock, there will be a sooial ev
ening for the children and friends
of the Sunday school. ' ,f:-1
IMMANUEL.
May 23. Halley's comet
has passed and still we are all
alive, i . i Those ., who i feared
that the end of time was near
can now rest in peace. "'t
: i ....... e .- . ....
There was a kind of an
electrical disturbance jlast
Thursday night that !some
what mystified some of V the
people around here. Several
families heaid their 'phdnes
popping and got up, ; vq , dis
connect the lines, thinking
j i j " -1 ' . L. 4LlAL.Ml
inat a rain, was comiijg up.
When they got outside riot a
cloud was to be seen, , HaN
leyrs comet is supDOsed Mtb be
the cause of the disturbance.
Two .Cabarrus
; 1 saw
something that they fought
was a .fox, Sunday .evening.
oners. and, got a gpn tq Joot
it. 'tiut:w;liiittnkM focfc it :
precytlift -poAhpgDiifc a , ;
cat. , Look better next , time
boys. e ; v
Rev. C. C. Wagoner, jand
Bfo. Murphy visited fi;ind&
anol relatives in ; CMrus
Saturday night and .Sunday.
Crawford Boger . visite$ H.
A. M. Barringer, Sunday
Paul ' A. Earnhardt, , of Sal
isbury, visited home'-Jolks
esaturaay nignt anci ouuuay.
, Miss Ella Wagoner visited
at , C, ' 3. Boger's Saturday
- . Do Yqm Get The Best
If yorihaie si' cough cold, ! asth
ma croup or any thrdat or bron
chial trouble! and use Dr. Bell's
Pine-Tar-Hohey, . you. do. )Look
or; the Bell, on the Bottle. t
A number of Rowan Baptist
spent1eyeral.ldayB of ?lBt week at
Harmony, Iredell county, where
a series 01 meetings were neia,
closing - Sunday. Rev. JtJN.,
Stallings 1 pieached a denomina
tional sermon there Sunday, morn
ing. Rev Stagings, C. R. Myers,
Jr., and J. A. Reid returned home
ounaay eyening.
; :. -..it :. ; , - ' - - Si 't
'. m .
6ranulatetl Ejre Lids
Can be cured without cauterizing
or scarifying by the use of Suther
land's Eagle Eye Salve. We guar
antee iUto cure) 25c everywhere.
J. C. Lingle-' of Faith, was in
the ' city Monday. Mr, Lingle
tells us he .. is .making arrange
ments for an excursion from Con
cord to Asheville Just after the
middle of July. Mr. Lingle is an
old hand at the business and will
have no trouble in securing a good
crowd. .,
Manelous Dlscoteries
mark the wonderful progress of
the agi. Air flights on heavy
machines, telegrams without wires,
terrible, war inventions to kill
men, and that wonder of wonlders
Dr. King's New Discovery- to
save life when threatened by
coughs, colds, lagrippe, asthma,
croup, bronchitis," hemorrhages,
hay fever and whoopiDg cough or
lung.tiouble. For all bronchial
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relieves instantly. Its the surest
cure. James. M. Blaok of Ashe
villerN. C.3. .R. No. 4, writes
it cured him of an obstinate cough
after all other remedies failed.
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