Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Oct. 14, 1909, edition 1 / Page 6
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Whac Did the Doctor Mean. (From the Philadelphia Inquirer.) "My husband is troubled with a buzzing noise in his oars. AVhat would you advise?" "I should advise him to go to the seaside for a month or two." "But he can't get away!" ' Then 3011 go ! " Running No Risk. "Wot ve want wit' dat telescope, Dusty?"' "So dat I kin look fer work at a safe distance." A Telephone Newspaper. News telephones are Budapest curi osities. The system has been in opera tion in the capital of Hugary for sev eral years past and is owned an man aged by a private corporation, where as the regular telephone system is owned by the government and admin istered by the ministry of ports and telegraphs. The annual subscription is $7.50 and is paid quarterly in ad vance and entitles tl2 subscriber to two receivers and the full service of nefs, music, etc. The service begins at S:5.5 a. m.. when a buzzing noise loud enough to be heard across a large room and lasting fifteen seconds an nounces the correct time. At 9:30 the day's programme of important events is announced that is to say, the ceremonies, lectures, plays, races, etc. At noon comes a second announce ment of the correct time, followed by parliamentary news and general items of news; at 12:15 stock quotations from the local Vienna and Berlin ex changes and general news; at 2 p. m. more parliamentary and general news and at 3 p. m. the closing prices of stocks, Aveather forecast, local person als and small items and in winter the condition of the various skating places: at 4 p. in., court and miscella neous news; from 4:30 to G:30 mili tary music from one of the great cafes or gardens. In the evening the subscriber may choose between the Royal Opera and one of the theatres and later music by one of the orches tras. The programme is varied enough to satisfy all calsses of subscribers and is enhusiastieally enjoyed. The Great Value of Oil on Roads. The practical advantages to be de rived by the oiling of roads has been very conclusively demonstrated this summer, when we have had so much dry weather. "When the Rising Sun Farmington macadam road was top 'tlressed some weeks ago oil was ap plied to a portion of it as an experi ment, and everyone who has had oc casion to use the road since has been convinced that the money expended for the 10 barrels applied has gone further and done more good than any like amount expended on the road since its construction. It has kept the dust down, and also prevented the topdressing from being blown off the road by the wind and scattered about by travel, permitting it to become a sort of binder and being a great ben efit to the road. The use of il on roads has passed the experimental stage, its beneficial results being so readily seen wherever it has been tried that it has become a big factor in road imorovement. Kentucky's Biggest Cornfield. The biggest corn field in the State tic horseshoe sweep of the Ohio river from Henderson round past Evans ville to Green river. It is the biggest because it is corn continuously for G, 000 cr 7,000 acres, unbroken by fences unrelieved by any other crop no hay, tobacco, oats, or wheat just corn, corn, and then more corn. It is esti mated that over 300.000 bushels of corn will be raised in this monster tract this year, and this in spite of the fact that the farmers were scared out of a year's growth by the high water, and for a time were not quite sure whether the high water would let them raise any corn. From the Louis ville Courier-Journal. So. 41-'09. CHILDREN SHOWED IT Effect of Their Warm Drink in the Morning. "A year ago I was a wreck from coffee drinking and was on the point of giving up my position in the school room because of nervousness. "I was telling a friend about it and she said, 'We drink nothing at meal time but Postum, and it is such a comfort to have something we can en joy drinking with the children.' "I was astonished that she would allow the children to drink any kind of coffee, but she said Postum was the most healthful drink in the world for children as well as for older ones, and that the condition of both the chil dren and adults showed that to be a fact. "My first trial was a failure. The cook boiled it four or five minutes, and it tasted so flat that I was in de spair, but determined to give it one more trial. This time we followed the directions and boiled it fifteen minutes after the boiling began. It was a decided success and I was com pletely won by its rich, delicious fla vor. In a short time I noticed a de cided improvement in my condition, and kept growing better and better month after month, until now I am perfectly healthy, and do my work in the school room with ease and pleas ure. I would not return to the nerve destroying regular coffee for any money." Read the famous little "Health Classic," "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. THE PULPIT. BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON DR. G. A. JOHNSTON ROSS. EY Theme: God's Second Ecst. Brooklyn, N. Y. The Rev. G. A. J Johnston Ross, D. D., preached Sun day in the Lafayette Avenue Presby terian Church. Dr. Ross, who was until recently the minister at St. Co lomba's Church in Cambridge, Eng land, a church largely attended by university men, has accepted the pas torate of the fashionable Presbyterian Church at Bryn Mawr, near Philadel phia. Dr. Ross spoke on "God's Sec ond Best" from the following text: I. Samuel 22: "For the Lord will not forsake His people for His great name's sake because it hath pleased the Lord to make you His people. Moreover as for me, God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceas ing to pray for you; but I will teach you the good and the right way. Only fear the Lord and serve Him in truth with all j'our heart; for consider how great things He hath done for you. But if ye shall still do wickedly, ye shall be consumed, both you and your King." He said: If a man has blundered and played the fool in the management of his life, missing his chances and throw ing foulness about his spirit, how far may that man, if anxious to do well, look for the recovery of lost ground and the renewal of opportunity? That is the question which I purpose to deal with to-night. Of course the unteachable fool must simply look forward to certain ruin, but I am thinking of a man anxious to redeem his life, and the question I want to discuss is this: Is there for such a man a second chance? For all I know such a man may have come into this church to-night; and how long he may have been worried with this question, and in how many churches he may have tried to get light upon it, God alone knows. But if there is a second chance for the man it is tre mendously important that the man should know its nature and extent. If a man has been depressed by fail ure and is really ashamed of his fool ishness he has almost a right to be made aware of the existence of the process of divine repair, if such a process really exists. And it is equal ly important that he should under stand the limitation of such a process of divine repair -for salvation, lest he should be too tempted to count upon divine indulgence, which does not, as a matter of fact, exist, or else he should be tempted to count upon the providential reordering of his life, which will not take place. What, precisely, does forgiveness mean? What does it involve? If it means that when one is sorry for sin, Gcd is glad to hear of it, that is a very creditable representation of God. But surely it means mere than that. Does it mean that God not only ap proves the man's penitence, but as sists him? Does forgiveness involve the recovery of lost ground? That is what we want to know. Is it legiti mate for a man to look forward, if he accepts Christ, to a real restoration of life, strength and hope? It is on the rock of that question that the mes sage of religion is most often split, either by being mispreached or mis understood. Men see for themselves that life becomes more and more tangled; that habit grows in power; that it is impossible to put the clock back; that wrongdoing sticks and clings and one's omissions and fail ures tend to lose their negative power and in time become stumbling blocks, and we are in the entanglement pro duced by sin, and then we hear the message of salvation. Woe betide the -religion which then holds out false hopes to the man. Thousands of men are asking: What do you preachers mean precisely by the for giveness of sin? Personally, I be- 1 lieve with all my heart and soul in the forgiveness of sin. There is a certain process, a principle, to which I want to call your attention, and I want to give that principle a certain name, which name, I warn you, is not absolutely accurate, but which is brief and approximates to accuracy. It is not my thought; I have borrowed it. The name is this: "God's second best." I believe, if we are to under stand the doctrine of forgiveness we must hold this truth of "God's second best." I will try to illustrate this. First of all, the Bible shows that the Jewish people were designed to stand before the nations of the world as the people of God, being obviously led and guided by the immediate spirit ual control of the one true God. As a scholar, now dead, put it, "Israel was to be so passionately devoted to God and to be so sensitive to the divine will that Israel was to need no human rule or government to compel then to do right. They were to live in the immediate intercourse with God." Israel had no king at the beginning. They were under God's care and they were to stand before the world as an object lesson. That was Israel's first best. The books of Judges and Samuel tell the story of Israel's degeneration from this first best. There came a time when the people said it was absolute ly necessary that they should have a king. Samuel was grieved at this de liberate renunciation of God's first best, and remonstrated. But the peo ple pressed him, and he prayed to Jehovah, and when he had done so he began to see that after all he must ac quiesce. Note the bearing of this on the meaning of forgiveness. God is represented as acquiescing in the ac tion of the people, and He says, "Let them have their king." oamuei says, "The Lord will not forsake His nenni fnr nja rrent name's sake." God is not going to be xiun-ie uecause you are. Thus it is shown that God is con sistent with Himself. God has planned a certain plan. Smash it as you please. You will not defeat God. But the kings passed away. Their existence was but a parenthesis in Israel's history. The prophets re mained still to hold up the idea of divine sovereignty until John the Baptist came and Jesus came, in whom the prophetship and kingship and priesthood were all realized to gether. You perceive that God is faithful throughout. He never al- ters the eternal plan "for His great Lame's sake." INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MENTS FOR OCTOBER 10. Subject: Paul a Prisoner The Plot, Acts 22:30-23:35 Golden Text: ps. 9:13 Commit Verse 11 Commentary 011 the Lesson. TIME. A. D. 58. PLACE. Jer usa lem . EXPOSITION. I. The Plot of the Jews to Murder Paul. 12-15. It looked very dark for Paul, and if Paul had been at all like most men he wnnid VinvA had a heavy heart. But in the night the Lord appeared to His faithful servant to cheer him. Possi bly Paul had been tempted to taink that he had made a mistake in com ing to Jerusalem against the protests of his friends. What Jesus had said to him wa! sufficient to banish all such thoughts as that. He told Paul to "be of god cheer," and that as he had borne t-stimony concerning Him at Jerusalem, so must he also bear testimony l. Rome. Evidently the Lord approved heartily of Paul's tes timonv at Jf -usalem. It is clear also that those v ho fancy that Paul was headstrong 5n going to Jerusalem, and was following his own wishes and not the leading of God in doing so, are altogother misjudging him. Quite likely Paul's appeal to Caesar Hi a later day (cn. 20:11; vvas tu& tested by the words that the Lord! fnfke to him at this time. A dan- jrerniis conspiracy and plot was form ing against him. But God was, as He always is, beforehand with His comfort and preparation for the cri sis. Human friends sometimes com fort us after the trial has ? risen, but It is God who comforts us before the need appears. The conspiracy wag strong and apparently dangerous. No less than forty men were in it. They were determined men, willing to go any length to compass their purpose. They would not even stop at murder, and would put aside everything even eating and drinking until this one thing was done. They fancied that they were the viceregents of God on earth, and had a right to put those whom they saw fit to regard as Ood's enemies out of the way. even without legal process of any kind. There is no more dangerous man than the man who fancies that it is for hira to judge who are God's friends and who are His foes, and that he himself is ap pointed of God to be the executioner of God's judgments. Doubtless these conspirators thought that they would be doing God a servi-e in putting Paul out of the wav (Jno. 16:2), a solemn warning to all in any age whe would take the judgments of God into their own hands. This was not the only time that Paul was th ob iect of such infamous plots (ch. 25:3; 9:23. 24: 14-5. C; 20:13: 2 Cor. 11: 22. 2C, 32, 33). The plot was well laid. It seemed certain of success. But it failed utterly. Why? God (Ps. 2:1-4; 64:1-10; Tsa. 89:10). Paul was just as safe ?fter this plot was formed as he was be fore (Rom. 8: 31). Forty desperate men, barked up by the powers that be. and in league with the devil himself, f3r ap parently accomplish a good deal in this world, but they are utterly pow erless against God. They cannot kill in Jerusalem a roan whom God has j appointed to go to Rome and bear witness of Jesus there. Paul was fol lowing again very closely in the road his Master walked in having such a plot formed against him (Matt. 26: 4). That the conspirators thought it a perfectly proner and pious thing that they were doing is evident from their disclosing it to the priests and elders (cf. Jer. 6:15: Hos.4:9). They sought the co-operation of the priests, and got it. II. God's Exposure and Defeat oi the Plot. 10-22. It required no mir acle to defeat the plot of the Jews. But the defeat was of God just as much as if the whole course of nature had been stopped. The plot leaked out and got to the ears of a relative of Paul. Very likely he did not sym pathize with Paul's views, but he re- coiled at the tnousrnt 01 nis Demg as sassinated. Paul's enemies were caught in their own counsel (cf. Job j 5:13; 1 Cor. 3:19). This scheme to j overthrow God's purposes and word 1 had failed utterly (cf. Pm 21:30; Lam. 3:37). Paul had faith in God, j but that did not prevent his taking ; judicious precautions to defeat the j wiles of his enemies (Matt. 10:16). j The cantains and colonel. both had oc j casion'to fear Paul (ch. 22:2 5-29).' Tbey were both eaer to do some-1 thing to gain his lavor. rroDatuy when the colonel took fie young man so courteously by the ';and and led him to one side he hope ' he had come to suggest a bribe for V rul's deliver ance (cf. ch. 24:26). T ub his fears and his cupidity wor -i together with other things to f "lire Paul's rescue ( cf . Rom. 8 : 2 8 ) l The plot not only failed, It resulted ' furthering God's plans and fulfill! 1 His word. It started Paul on the 1 - -1 to Rome, and brought him in'- Caesarea, where he had the opport - ty of bear ing witness for Christ 1 "ore Felix, Festus, Agrippa. Drusi"" and Ber nlce. It resulted also in iSat impris onment to which we owe - many pre cious epistles. Again G- ' made the wrath of men to praise I ; t (Ps. 76: 10). It is not at all lik 'v that the conspirators kept their 1 ord about not eating or drinking he l they had killed Paul. From the Talmud we learn that in such a case the rabbis had power to absolve the--. So will p-ory plan that ii formed against God's faithful servants fail, even 1 when it :icems to succeed (Isa. 64: 1 . Quaker Meditations. Some men impress us as having been horn -with a great deal of ex perience. Many a fellow who claims to fce wedded to his art considers himself the better half. (So, .Maudie, dear; just because a sirl doesn't paint we shouldn't say that she was artless. The fellow who is crooked natur ally wants a -wider path than the straight and narrow one. Philadel- I phia Record. Afraid of Ghosts Many people crc afraid of ghosts. Few people ere afraid of germs. Yet the ghost is a fancy and the germ is a fact. If the germ could be magnified to a size equal to its terrors it would appear more terrible than cny fire-breathing dragon. Germs can't be avoided. They are in the air we breathe, the water we drink. The germ can only prosper when the condition of the system gives it free scope to establish it self and develop. When there is a deficiency of vital force, languor, restlessness, a sallow cheek. a hollow eye, when the appetite is poor and the sleep is broken, it is time to guard against the germ. You can fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce's Gold en Medical Discovery. It increases the vital power, cleanses the system of clogging impurities, enriches the blood, puts the stom ach and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition, so that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in which to breed. "Golden Medical Discovery" contains no alcohol, whisky or habit-forming drugs. AH its ingredients printed on its outside wrapper. It is not a secret nostrum but a medicine op known composition and with a record of 40 years of cures. Accept no substitute there is nothing just as good." Ask your neighbors. Who has gold can choose his son- in-law. -German. Perry Davis' Painkiller has been the standby for colds, neuralgia, strains, burns or bruise for over three generations. That which turns out well is better than any law. Menander. CHILD ATE CUTICURA. Spread Whole Eox of It on Cracker Not the Least Injury Resulted Thus Proven Pure and Sweet. A New York friend of Cuticura writes: "My three year old son and heir, after .ue,u. iJ l , .T ln across tac ro being put to bed on a trip across the At- cated a box of graham crackers and a box of Cuticura Ointment. When a search was made for the box, it was found empty and the kid admitted that he had eaten the contents of the entire box spread on the crackers. . It cured him of a bad cold and I don't know what else." No more conclusive evidence could be offered that every ingredient of Cuticura Ointment is absolutly pure, sweet and l armless. If it may be safely eaten by a joung child, none but the most beneficit.1 results can be expected to attend its appli cation to even the tenacrest kin or youngest infant. Potter Drug & Chcm. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedie. Boston. Mass. Dog Worms Tobacco. It is frenquently the case that the intelligent things imputed to dogs have as their only foundation the imagination of the writers, but when we relate the remarkable performance of a young shepherd dog belonging to Squire John F Wirth, we state only the exact facts, as the same were told to us by the members of the family, j Besides being a wideawake, faithful watchdog, he takes his row in the to bacco patch with the other hands and gets away with as many tobacco worms as the best of them. Lame Co. (Ky.) Herald. Wasted buspicions. "After all, it is an advantage to have a sophisticated husband." "In what way?" "Well, it isn't neces sary to waste time hunting through his pockets at night." Chicago Rec-ord-Ifrrakl. awa Cleawses te System EjfectuaWy, Dispels colds awd Headaches Acts TvoXuYcNVy, acsw as aLaxaYvve. Best Jot New JVbmen avtaXwk teu Jbuxi arA 0a. To et VVs bxeJco e$$ecs, always buy tte Qewxime manufactured by the CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS one size orvly. regular price 50 per bottle. The Surest Remedy known the one that has been the most effective in curing the severest cases of -Diarrhea, Dys entary, Cholera-Infantum, Colic, Cramp, Cholera-Morbus, is DR.D.JAYNE'S CARMINATIVE BALSAM This remedy has been successfully used for 79 years, and bas always produced the desired results. Thou sands of families always keep it in their homes. Its curative properties are wonderfully soothing and effective. Sold by All Leading Druggist 25c. per bottle UTNAM Color more Roods brighter and f asier colors tuau aay other dve. One IDs. package colors ;J-. libers. can dye any Rurmrtit without ripping apart. Write lor free booklet How to jye. liieaca aud Mix HERE IT IS! Want to. learn all about a Horse? How to Pick Out a Good One? Know Imperfections and so Guard against Fraud ? Detect Disease and Ef fect a Cure when same is possible? Tell the Age by the Teeth? What to can the Dif ferent Parts of the Animal? How to bnoe a Horse Properly? All this and other Valuable Information can be ob tained by reading our 100-PAGE ILLUS TRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, postpaid, on receipt of only 25 cents in stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. I "I I Sin is disease, deformity and weak ness. Plato. ' So. 41-'09. Constipation causes many serious dis eases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic. In the widow's house there is no fat mouse. Oriental. For COLDS and GRIP. Hick's CAvuDivrt Is the best remedy relieves the aching and feverishness cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid effects immediately. 10c. 25c and 50c. atdru? stores. IHleadacBie "My father has been a sufferer from sick i headache tor ttte last twenty-nve years aim never found any relief until he began taking your Cascarets. Since he has begun taking Cascarets be has never had the headache. They have entirely cured him. Cascarets do what you recommend them to do. I will give you the privilege of using his name. ' ' E. M. Dickson, 1120 Resiner St., W. Indianapolis. Ind. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. Never old in bulk. The gen uine tablft stamped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 925 rree liooaiet sellin? horse 8POHN MEDICAL CO., A Certain Cure for Sqre,Weak& Inflamed Eyes. aas in i-1 mm Sill II I 11 1 B .9 -i-- MAKESTKE USE OF DRUGS UNNECESSARY! Price, 25 Czrts.Dmf?sfs. hi Nearly ill women suffer at times from female ailments. Some women suffer more acutely and more constantly than others. But whether you have little pain or whether you suffer 1 intensely, you should take Wine of Cardui and et relief. Cardui is a safe, natural medicine, for women, prepared scientifically from harmless vegetable in gredients. It acts easily on the female organs and gives strength and tone to the whole system. t The Woman's Tonic Mrs. Verna Wallace, of Sanger, Tex., tried Cardui. She writes : "Cardui has done more for me than I can describe. Last spring I was taken with female inflammation and consulted a doctor, but to no avail, so I took Cardui, and inside of three days, I was able to do my housework. Since then my trouble has never returned." Try it. AT ALL DBUGr STORES OUTHERfl SCHOOL OF TELESRflPHY NEWNAN. GEORGIA. Established 21 years. Tlie Old-!. Mol Reliable mi I H-mt TMraph School In the soiiih. Tuition reasonable; board cheap: tawn healthful &nl pleasant. Weteach TELFORAPHY. TYPEWRITING & RAILROAD AGENCY. A sch:xl fjr YOUNG MEN and LADILS. Open year round. Students can enroll at any time. Moit modern equip ment; instruction thotoujrh and practical. Onl' 4 to 6 mj.ith.4 rtsiilreJ t-J rua!ify for service. Diplomas awarded. Graduate GUARANTEED jroad poiitfjns. Tiiey beifin on $45 to $65 per month: rapid promotion: stead.- employ nent Constant imnnd for Telegraphers. Telegraphy is the oniy trade or professto NOT overcrowded. Write today for our 1909 handsomely illustrated 64-pajre Catalog. It contains full partic ulars about Telegraphy and our School and will fuliy convince you that the S. S. T. is the BLST. It is FKLE ard will be mailed promptly on request. You cau't afford to miss it. It will encourage and inspire you- SOUTHERN SCHOOL Of TELEGRAPHY, Newnan, Ga. FADELESS CfliDcks OoSrog Weflfl ? If Not, Learn Why C'rom a Book Costing Less Than the Value of One Chicken Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this is to protit by the experience of otnere. We offer a. book telling all you need to know on the subject a book written by a man who made his living for 25 years in Raising 1'ouftry, and in that time necessarily had to experiment and spend much money to learn the best way to conddt-t the business for the small sum of 25 CENTS in postage stamps. It tells vou how to Detect and Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breed ing Purposes, and indeed about everything you must know on the suhiect to make uccess. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. BOOK PUBLISHING MOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. IN. Y. City. r v jJoiLERpEE; PIPE-VALVES FITTING AND SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS. LOMBARD IRON WORKS, AUGUSTA GA. 1 Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color REMOVES DANDRUFF AND SCURF Invigorates and prevents the hair from falling off, Tor Sele b Druggists, or Sent Direct by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia $ Fer Bottle; Ssmpls Bottle 35c. Send for Circular' QUICKEST WITH SAFETY ,9, CURE Viz list mrant to?. it'asJi$ For the baby often mean rest for both mother and child. Little ones like it too it's so palatable to take. Free from opiates. A!) Druggists, 25 cent. CHILDHOOD'S BUGBEAR BANISHED Whn mother Bald litor Oil, you rrniem ber dfdtttirtly what it rnen.ii t, trouble! .Mlratuiftteiliig Castor Oil, ttie best, safest and naenifBt cathartic to your children vividly i era Hp yt-ui early Dnlmppln-ns mud areali7.atfnn of mutter' rtiflicn1! iit. PALATAL, A CREAM OF CASTCR OIL looks, smells, tastos pond : makrs mother's dnty -. CliiMrrii I icfe tb sjiouu. Sic 11 drnc!fltp ir P'llfl. I MUS3AY DRUS CO., COLUMBIA, S. C. KO. & kU. CABOLIKA AUBKTS CURE! p sy Removes all swelling la t to J dayi ; effect a permanent cur in 30 to 6odas. Trial treatment (rirentree. .Nolhtngcan Dexauw Write Dr. H. H. Green' Sent. Saadaitatn. Bi Atlanta. . YeTfEUCEa 0& 3 kasjsB COLT DESTCzrVaPER Can be handled very easily. The sick art? cured, and all other In same stable, no niaUfr how 'expo-tM." kept from havlnar the disease, by usiusr f-POHN'.S LIQUID DISTEMPER CUR . 'Give on the tongue or In feed. Acts on the blooj and expels frerma of a!l forms of distemper, best reined? ever known for mares in foa!. One bottle (ruaraiiu c i to cure one ease. 50c and l a bottle; A t $5 and$10.iozeii. of druggists and haraes dealers, or Miit t zpress fl paid by manufacturers. Cut Rhow how to poultice throat. Our gives every tunnr. j,ocal agents wanted. Largest remedy in ex Istenee twelve vears. Chemists and Ccctericlo:;sts. Goshen, Ind., U. 3. A. J 38 YES J be;- .ya in coiU ratcr better than, an v nther dye. TfJ Colors. fllOJHOIi UllVH CO., Onincy. Illinois).
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 14, 1909, edition 1
6
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