Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / Sept. 26, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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r1 nip riftfrriIrrC1r! I J . '1 O i if II! - - f .. -M..-l. ' , . . JAS.O,BOrLIK,EDITOBMDPUBLISHEB ? i " PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THUBSDAY " 1.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADYAITf ; - - ' -:' - . , j r Volume 27 1 1 Wadesboro, N. C., Monday, September 26, 1910 Number 87 ' 1 ' 1 1 1 " 1 '" I . l I Despair and Despondency No one but a woman can tell the story of the suffering, the despair, and the despondency endured by women who carry , daily burden of ill-health and pain because of disorders and derangements of the delicate and important organs that are distinctly feminine. The tortures so bravely endured com pletely upset the nerves if long continued. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a positive cure for weakness and disease of the feminine organism. IT MAKES WEAK WOflEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It tones and builds op the nerves. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell it, and nave nothmg to urge upon you as just as good." non-secret, non-alcoholic and has a record of fortv vears of cures. Asc Your Neighbors. They probably know of some of its many cures. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to cure them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing only, and he will send you a fret copy of his great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser revised, up-to date edition, in paper covers. In handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. . It is PROFESSOR GRUBER. at e C f f e e Cents We have 125 one-pound cans of O'Donohue's 5th Avenue Mocha and Java Coffee The retail value is 35 cents per pound. While this small lot lasts our customers may have it for 25 cents per pound. This is a high grade coffee, and you will never again have an opportunity to buy it at such a bargain. HARM SON I 0 M PAN! Attention, -A Farmers. Our gins Nos. 1 and 2 have been thoroughly repaired and put in first class condition. New saws have been placed, and we offer first class work for $1.25 per bale. All cotton will be ginned as quickly as possible, so that it can immediately be put on the market. l'JIDESD0R0 OIL PILL Telephone No. 63. t Charlotte Chronicle. ' , The States ville Landmark bag come across a copy of-a Pennsylvania paper and copies from it an article which givea as the pleasurable assur ance that our bid friend, Professor Gruber is still alive and fiddling. He is the father of the Gruber fa'mily, eyery member of "which 'could play on some sort of an instrument some of them on two or three at a time. The professor was a whole band in himself. We have seen him blow a harp, play a fiddle, beat a drum and tap the triangle all at one and the i same time, using mouth, fingers and toe? in the performance. It Beems that in his old age he la now 72 he has learned a new stunt the playing of the fiddle with one hand. The Pennsylvania paper, quoted by Tbe Landmark, says: "This he does with the left hand, holding the in strument in mid-air fingering as he Bupports it, while the bovr is held at the end by his teeth and rests lightly -upon the strings. As if this were not enough the professor sings the air which helayiug at the same time.'' We are pleased to know that Professor Gruber is now carrying the dough around in his pockets. He is .still in possession of his famous Greek fiddle, 394 years old, - the offer for which have now got .up to $32,000 and refused. . UNSIGHTLY E RUPTION ON FACE AND HEAD Afflicted for Months Burned and Itched Used Cuticura and He was Cured in Three Weeks Not Even a Scar Left. "A a grateful mother, I feel it rny duty to thank you for the cure of my little sou wno was amiciea ior about eight months with sores ail over his head, back of his neck and nearly all his fare. We tried all kinds of remedies without any relief. We eren employed a gooa Ehysiciaa and I am sure e tried his very best to cure my poor suffering little boy. But, alasl Instead of getting better be went for the worse. His head was literally covered with scabs and ugly sores and his cries kept us awake throughout the long night. I had to keep his hands in gloves to prevent bis scratching his head, as be was doubtless suffering from a . burning an itching sensation, and was con-, stantly trying to put bis hands where it hurt. "At last when he was about three years old, we saw an advertisement of Cuticura and I decided to try the virtues of tbe Cuticura -Remedies. I bought one cake of Cuticura Soap, a box of Cuticura Ointment and a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent. 1 used them according to directions and I am happy to tell you the little sufferer was cured in less than three weeks. This was over a year ago and now his head is covered with a fine growth of luxuriant hair. Strange to say, all those unsightly sores did not even leave a scar. Mrs. G. O. Couvilion, Plaucheville, La., Feb-, ruary 26, 1910." The suffering which Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment have alleviated among skin-tortured, disfigured infants, children and adults have led to their adoption in countless homes as the purest, sweetest and most eco nomical treatment for eczemas, and other Itching, burning humors of the skin and scalp. A single set is often sufficient. Cuticura Remedies are sold throughout tbe clvu Ixed world. Potter Drug A Cham. Corp., Sole Prop-. Boa too. aa-MaUed tree. Si-pale Cuticura Book. "Bow to Care tor an Treat the Skin and Scalp." GETTING SOMETHING FOR NOTHING. Success Magazine. J It is a strange phase of b.umafl,pa- ture, which does not quite appreciate or feel the propper gratitude for. fa vors, says Orison Swett Harden in "Success Magazine." I have hard ly ever known a boy whose way was paid through college, for example, by some one interested in him, to show the proper regard for hia help er, or to quite respect the one who Roosted him who furnished crutch es for him when he might have had (o use his own legs. As a rule, the things that we are helped to are never fully appreciated. We experience a satisfaction when $v nave nonesuy earned a imog which we do not feel when it is giv en to us. There is something within which rebels at being helped, because help from others tends to kill self respect. We do not think quite so much of ourselves after having ac cepted favors or a position which we have not earned, as we did before. The sense of justice in us is violated. We do not feel quite honest in a ac cepting something for nothing. The man who tries - to get along without satisfying hia sense of justice is always placed at a disadvantage. He may try .to be grateful for the un merited help, tor the assistance in getting that which he has uot earned, for being given a position far above his merits, through a "pull"; but he never feels quite right about it. The man who has been lifted aboveotbers because he was a son or a relative, or because his father owned controlling interest in the concern, never quite respects himself when he goes around among the employees and sees those who. have struggled for years and have worked over hours for the po sition he occupies, and who in fact have developed the strength to main tain the position after they get it. Hia sense of fairness is violated. He knows that it is not right to take the place which somebody else has hon estly earned, and who according to merit should have it. He is con scious, too, that he is not equal to the demands of the position into which be has been boosted. CHAVEZ CROSSES ALPS. and Your Picture A Safe Game. Youth's Companion. He may have meant to be polite, but there can be no question that he actuallv did a very ruTte- thing. He was a Frenchman, riding in a street car. Two women entered, and see ing no seats, stood. Tbe gentleman, who sat near them, rose, removed his hat, and said, "I give my seat to tbe elder of these two ladies." Neither made a move to take the seat, but each glanced at the other in a haughty manner, as much as to say, "Sit down, madam!" "Is neither madame," said the Fienchman, bowing to one lady, "nor madame," bowing to the other, "the elder? Then I shall have to re same my seat." ' . Daring Aviator Falls Broken Bleeding at the Goal. Domodossola, Italy, Sept 25. The great feat of crossing the snow capped Alpine barrier 'between Switzerland and Italy in a heavier-Ihan-air machine was accomplished today by George Chart z, the young Peruvian aviator. The plucky hero of the exploit, however, lies tonight in the Domo dossola hospital badly hurt as tberesult of an accident that occurred just as he had completed the most - arduous and nerve-racking portion of a task he had set out to accomp'ish a flight from Brig in Switzerland, across the Alps to Milan, iu Italy, in all a dis tance of about 75 milt s. AVIATOR BADLY HURT. Both his legs are broken, his left thigh is fractured and bis body is badly contused, but his physicians are of the opinion that these injuries will not prove tatal. The accident occurred as Chavez was endeavoring to make a landing here. The Alps had been crossed successfully and the aviator was descending with the power of his machine cut off. When about 30 feet above the ground a sudden gust of wind seemed to catch the monoplane, which turned over aad fell. When the crowds that had been watching tbe descent rau up they found Chavez lying bleeding and unconscious beneath the twisted wreckage. Willing bands lifted the aviator from the ground and hore him to tbe hospital. Fifty mi las away and over coun try that has none of the hazards of the Alps lay Milan, the goal Chavez was seeking in an effort to win the $20,000 prize offered by the Italian Society. AN AUSPICIOUS START. The weather at Brig was clear and bright when Chavi z made his start. leaving the ground with his motor running at full speed he rose in sweeping circles until he had reached an altitude sufficient for him to clear the Itesti shoulder to the southeast ward of Brig. This obstacle having been overcome, the Peruvian aviator beaded his monoplane straight for the snow-capped crags of the Flttc- horn. Constantly ascend iner.'Chavez ached the Simplon IT'slu, where at an altitude estimated at 7.200 feet he turned his machine south over tbe terrifying Simplon pa9s, with the Kaltwaster glacier at his left and tbe frozen peak of the Hubschorn at his right. After crossing the divide, instead ol taking a short cut over the Mon chers pass, a huee edged elacier. Chaves turned the towering white mountain head of Monte Leone. which rises to a height of 16,646 feet, and passed down above the gondo gorge, a deep gulf between sheer walls, until he reached the open val ley of Vedro and then descended easily toward Domodossola, which is 889 feet above sea level. It was here that the accident occurred. will more than interest your friends. It creates that friendship that can't be forgotteni Come to Wadesboro. Visit BLAND'S STUDIO. Many new styles to select from. Bu y Money Orders OF THE Southern Savings Bank, Poachland Wodceboro Aaaoavllla thereby keeping your money at home, Instead ot patronizing out side interests, as you will if you buy money orders ot tbe post office or the express company. . It Saved Hi Leg. "All thought I'd lose my leg." writes J, A. Swenson, of Watertown, Wis. "Ten years of eczema, Shat 15 doctors could not cure, had at last laid me up. Then Buck len'a Arnica Salve cured it, sound and well." Infallible for Skin Eruptions, Ec zema, Salt Rheum. Boils, Fever Sores, Burns. Scalds. Cuts and Piles. 25c at Parsons Drug Co. DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs over Tomlinsou's drug ttore. . Phon 79. ! ; ? Wadesboro, N. O. MM NOSEBLEED. Youth's Companion. Epistaxis, that is to gay, nosebleed, is an accident which will sometimes occur in the best-regulated families, and happily in most cases, need oc casion no alarm. In fact, It may of ten be hailed as an advantageous symptom, especially when it occurs in healthy, full blooded young peo ple. There are also certain diseases, such as Bright's or cirrhosis of tbe liver, or typhoid fever, when an at tack of nosebleed may do good rather than harm; when it is, in fact, sim ply a sign that Mother Nature is try ing to relieve -her child in one way because she is balked in another. In these case3 the flow is beneficial, but the subject of the attack should be watched in order that there should not be undue profusion, leading to a weakening of tbe vital forces, or if too prolonged, to a genuine anemia. When an attack of nosebleed seems to be doing no harm, as in the case of a young, healthy boy or girl, it is best to let it alone, or at the most af ter a time to use some very simple remedy, such as the application of cold over the brow, by means of a cloth wrung out of quite cold water, or by snuffing a little cold water up the nostrils. There are certain old-fashioned remedies, such as putting the key of tbe front door down the back, which do neither harm nor good, but which owe their origin to the same theory the application of cold and shock. When cold water is snuffed up through the nostrils, the addition of some mild astringent alum or tan nin, for example will make the treatment more quickly efficacious. Sometimes, when other slight rem edies serm to fail, pressing on the nostrils will succeed in Stopping the flow. As to internal remedies, there is none kuown that is of any avail in a dangerous nosebleed, and when the danger-point i9 reached there is noth ing to do but plug the nostrils. When this treatment is called for the physi cian should be sent for to apply it, because he can, by examination, lo cate the exact point of bleeding, and win Know just where the pressure should come..-V -. There a re "o nosebleed, for tunately very rare, where it is im possible to check the flow. ' These cases are caused by a diseased state of the system which prevents coagu lation of the tl )od, so that it simply tlo a's and flows away from the suf ferer like water. It is well that these cases are rare, as they are generally fatal in spite of a'.l treatment. A VISIT TO BAITS' FARM. COTTON SEED. Mr. Bat Hti Twcatv-Acre Field mt Cora That Averages Four Etri to lb Stalk WIU Produce lOO Baehcia to I ho Aero. Raleigh Evening Times. Yesterday afternoon a party of Raleigh-men who are deeply inter ested in the subject of corn and cot ton growing in this state, went out to the farm of Mr. J. F. Batts, near Garner, to take a look at his great 20-acre corn field. The party, con sisting of Governor Kitchin, Col. J. Bryan Grimes, Supt. J. Y. Joyner, Mr. J. J. Laughinghouse, Col. Fred A. Olds and J. V. Simms, of The Evening Times, left the Capital at 3:30 o'clock in a big touring car, go ing by way of Garner and out to the celebrated Batt9 farm. On arriving at the farm Mr. J. F. Batts and his lather were ready for the party and an inspection was first made of the 20-acre field which has caused so much comment. This field is not so thick as tbe famous acre raised by Mr. Batts last year, but the field will average about four ears to tbe stalk. It is estimated that he will get an average yield of 100 bush els to the acre. The ears are very fine and many of the stalks run up to eight and nine ears and some were frund with ten t nd eleven, and one stalk was seen having thirteen. Mr. Batts has other corn besides this field, but as this square of 20 acres was only medium soil he decided to see what good cultivation would do and the fine field of 20 acres is the result of this intensive cultivation. In a small field near-by Mr. Batts is developing bis seed corn. In this field tbe stalks are single in the hit! and several feet apart, but the stalks run from seven to eleven ears to the stalk. This is the famous BatH Pro lific and Mr. BatU stated to the par ty that he retailed his seed corn last year for $5.00 per bushel and could not fill one half his orders. Three of the stalks were selected and shelled ior xur. liain oy ne party ana a sicTipa statement crivpn him ' course it is understood that this corn was not thoroughly dry, but still it shows an enormous yield per stalk Mr. Batts is one of tbe new kind of farmers who believe in doing things in merignt way. lie nengyesvin in- FOR FALLING HAIR. In the cure of consumption, concentrated.easilydigested nourishment is necessary. For 35 years Scott's Emulsion has been the standard, world-wide treatment for consumption. Anpruit Millionaire's Sand Cure. Cambridge, Mass., Sept. 21. That the ultimate cure for indigestion has heed discovered is the belief of Wi liam A. Graustein, millionaire head of a milk firm. urausiein naa oeec a victim or in digestion for years. On the advice of a physician ha procured some common building sand, sterilized it and took a spoonful of it three times a c y in six weeks, it is said a cure was effected. Djzna of his friends have tried the same treat m i.t with what was declared to be favorable results. N iw whenever Graustein feels run flu n or has any work iu hand re. q i. ioe "sharpened" faculties he rrut lies into bis desk and takes a spoonlul of bis panacea from a w II fi 1 d vial. Yon Run No Hlik Wben Von Uaa Thlt Remedy. We promise you that, if your bair is falling out, and you have not let it go too far, you can repair the damage already done by using Rxall '93" Hair Tonic, with per sistency and regularity, for a rea sonable length of time. It is a scientific, cleansing, antiseptic, ger micidal preparation, that destroys microbes, stimulates good circula tion around the hair roots, promotes hair nourishment, removes dandruff and restores hair health. It is as pleasant to use as pure water, and it is delieat?ly perfumed. It is a real toilet necessity. We want you to try Rexall "93" Uair Tonic with our promise v. win cost you noining unless are perfectly satisfied with its two siz'os, prices that you use. 50c. can this It comes in and il.00 Remember,' you obtain Hexall Remedies in community only at our store The ltxall Store. The Parsous Drug Co. WHYNOT GET RID OF CATARRH? ROY jjM. HJJNTL D. D. S. EY Office Second Floor of New National Bank Building. TTuia, uuuc uav ui Night. PHONE NO 80. Ilf-rfl are snmp of thf svmntnms of W. F. GRAY. D. D. S. lca,arrh; if yu have aQy of them set a i a t s a i! riu in mem wniie mere id yet uiue I T . . 4 U A O (OFICK IN SMITH & DTJNLAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C, AU Operations Warranted Cols and Caskets When you want a nice Coffin oi : Casket, at a reasonable price examine the line I carry. I have them from the cheapest to the nest. tt-llice Hearse Is always in readiness, and every feature of the undertaking busi ness receives my careful atten tion, whether day or night - I also carry a nice line ol tURIAL ROBES. ; S. S. Shepherd The Undertaker MONEY LOST If yon fail to carry INSURANCE I write Fire, Accident, Health, Liability and Fly-Wheel Insurance. W. LEAK STEELE. PHONE NO. 163. Fire and Life Insurance. I wvue ire insurance in two North Carolina companies, in nine other United States companies, and in iouruoreign companies, i repre sent one oi ine uesi uiu iine lAie in Burance Companies The utaal Ben- eat. Phone 103. Hill House, D. A. C3RE3 OR. there is Is your throat raw? Dj you sneeze often? Is your breath foul? Are your eyes watery? Do you. take cold easily? Is your nose stopped up? Do you have to spit often? Do crusts form in your nose Are you losing your sense of smell Do you blow your nose a great deal? Does your moutn taste bad morn ings? .. Do you have to clear your throat on rising, or have a discharge from the nose? Does mucus drop in back of throat? Have you ringing noises in the ears? UYOSIEI (pronounce it High-o- me) is guaranteed to cure catarrh, coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis, asthma and croup, or money back. Just breathe it in. Complete outfiit, including hard rubber inhaler, $1.00. Druggists everywhere and the Par sons Drug Co. sell IIYOMEI. If you already own an inhaler, you can buy an extra bottle of - HYOMEI for enly 50 cents. Hyena E.ttng Itself Up. Washington, Sept. 22. Persistent ly gnawing off its left hind leg and drinking its own blood, a spotted hy ena of the brooding, not the laughing, variety is-committing progressive suicide at the National Zoological Garden. The animal, a gift to the zoo from Adam Forepaugh in 1S95, began the process of self-destruction several days ago, and before its keepers dis covered the cause of the injuries it had chewed the flesh from the paw to the middle joint of the leg. It is now in a state of physical exhaustion, and keepers at the zoo fear it will be necessary to kill the animal. Demen tia is believed to have attacked" the hyena. Several years ago there was a sim ilar case at the national zoo, a hyena chewing at its side until several ribs were exposed. It was shot. Don't Break Dowa. Severe strains on tbe vital organs, tike strains on machinery, pause breakdowns. Yon can't overtax stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or nerves without serious - danger to yourself. If you are weak or run down, or under strain of and kind, take Electric Bitters, the matchless tonic medicine. Mrs. J. E. Van de Sande, of Kirkland, 111., writes: "That, I did not break down, while enduring a most severe strain, for three months, is due wholly to Electric Bitters." Use them and enjoy health and strength. Satisfaction positively guaran teed. 50c at Parsons Drug Co. tensive cultivation arid liTsTUOcess with a small farm shows what can be done. He nt only has the world beat on corn, but he has fruit of every kind, chickens, cittle, hogs, horses, and everyming inai Enouid do iuuna on tbe farm, and he has the very best kind. He stated that he would kill a large number ot hogs and would have several thousand pounds of meat. He recently brought a two horse wagon load of hams and bacon to Raleigh for sale. Alter enjoying a least ol scupper- nong grapes ana iruits tne party re turned to Raleigh, every one being enthusiastic over the fine things aocn m t rtnlfr nn XT r Tlatta farnt W . J . I . . .... .J . U . Ill J but every farmer in that section of the county seems to have caught the spirit and the road is lined on both Bides with fields of fine cotton and corn. me cotton in that section is very fine and some of the farmers who own one hundred acres or more in cotton say they will easily get a bale to the acre. Wake county farmers are leading the worfU in the production of cotton and corn and a trip out to one of these fine farms is an education. Tbe farmers of Wake are now cominc to a realization of what they can do and what an opportunity is at their door, but there is one thing that holds them back, and that question is one of good roads. Tbe roads in Wake are just 50 years behind the county and the next thing for the farmers to settle is one of having Macadam roads into every section and corner of the county. With this Wake would soon lie the garden spot of the world. . The fallowing copy of the state ment given Mr. Batts shows what the party found and how they appre ciate what Mr. Batts, the "Corn King'" is doing for Wake: "Garner, N. C, Sept. 21, 1910. "R. F. D. No. a On this day we personally shelled the corn from three stalks, with the following results, the stalks being taken from a field of 20 acres on tbe farm of J. F. Batts: "One stalk, 7 ears, weight 2 lbs, shelled corn. "One stalk, 9 ears, weight 2J lbs. shelled corn. One stalk, 4 ears, weight 2 lbs. shelled corn. "We also personally viewed the . . ,. r . ... zu-acre ueiu iruiu wmcn mi3 corn was taken and found it very'even in height and in ear-formation, aver aging about 4 eara to the stalk. (Signed) "W. W. KlTCHIX. "J. Bryan Grimes. ' "J. Y. Joyner. "J. V. SIMMS. "J. J. Laughing hoc "Fred A. Olds." Monroe Enquirer. The price of cotton seed is too I v, has always been too low. It is tru that cotton seed are selling for mere pound for pound than cornjs krir; ing, and compared with prices year- ago the price of cotton peed is away up, but that does not mean that tbe price of this wonderful product i? high enough. When cotton eefd were selliDg for eight and ten ceuts a bushel they were worth more than that for the purpo. they were usk! for fertilizing the land. When it was discovered that lard, which is superior to pure hog larJ; that "pure olive oil," superior to any product of the olive tree, could be extracted from the seed of the cut- ton plant, and the feeding qualities of the seed improved and the seed not injured in the lea3t as a fertilizt-r, then the price of seed doubled but it did not keep pace with the value of the finished product. Oae of these days some Inventor is going to make a farm oil mill, and, instead of the farmer bringing hii raw seed for sale, you will $e him coming in with barrels of oil, and he will keep every pound of meal am i hulls on his farm, except tho meal be sel's to uiake bread, for the day i coming when we will all eat cotton soed bread. You will not eat it don't like the cotton-seedy taste of that bread, did . you say? Yes, all of us were saying just a few years ago that we woud never use cotton seed oil for cooking purposes, that the cotton-seedy smeil and taste was unbearable, but they . have eliminated that taste and that smell from tne .cotton seed cooking oil and the cotton seed lard and we eat cotton seed oil cookery and call it good. They are just "monkeying" with colton seed now. We laug when we think of how our daddies dump ed cotton seed in heap3 in the fields; winter time, and consider the price of eight cents a bushel for cotton seed ridiculous, but in a few'3'ears from now, when you who read these lines and he who writes them are pointed out as the oldest inhabitants, we will talk about the time when cotton seed brought the low price of fifty cents a mshel. . ' Kot long from now the Cotton far-; mer can get a good big price to al low some one to haul, his seed away,. bring back every pound of hulls and meal these seed make will be paid a good big price, we say, for the privilege ol extracting the oil from the seed. A few years figo the western graic grower nan a aream oi "uonai wheat." The Southern cotton .far mer is sitting up and looking for th day of "dollar cotton seed." It coming. i M v T':$ n 111 fe-' lr"' - M 0 4u mug i 1,200,000 In Use DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS First-AlwaysBest-Cheapes World's Stand arc Ten years ahead of all others in feature of separator practicable; ' Beautiful in Design Perfect in Constructio. Everlasting in Daily Send for handsome catalogue lustrattaa and describicr ail the 1: eat improved machines in detail, 14 be had for the asking. Ths De Laval Separator C:, 1M-UI IMMMUt NCW TOU t I. IMDtaOM tr CMICft.O Mtm mcwk wto T V SAM FIMKKCO MONT Kf Ah tot t ATTVt Notice. TLW i to notify the public tbt we not buy cotton w ith. mow U;:u 5 yards of b:Kia to the l aic tt juvpt reduced price). Mi!W and exports.-A (use to recti vo it ttna a wiili inore 1 this amount and we are c.ti: ; .:! t- em ourselves aceorvLuciv, M.LIAK.V MAUSilAl-L, T. W. Al SliX, H ARDl.M N CO , WAiu'sr.ouiu-oTn'O" si- V. M. lU KNS. a i
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1910, edition 1
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