Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / March 30, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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State Netfs. The Scotland Keck Graded School bull din r was burned Monday, Eugene V. Debts, the Socialist leader, spoke in Greensboro Satur- day night. ? ! The next annual meeting of the North Carolina Press Association will be held at Lenoir, June 20nd to 23rd. Dud Lowder, of Albemarle, Stanly County,, was killed last Wednesday ftamnAit f) th Ynloe!on of the - .: 1 boiler at his saw-mill near AIbe- r00ra when Miss Gracie Baucom lift-1 siuwauaee, v r rua.y, -f Blacks tone Hotel today. Mr. Brown marie. led a large lamp from the bureau, itftroyed the Friend building, conferred with local officers of his j exploded suddenly from some un-ow loss was estimated at 300-j compaiy. They departed this etea- A new military company has heenj known cause, and spattered burning! 000. jlng for Iowa. A $40-acreVaneh near formed at Dunn, Harnett County, j 0ji ail over the room, igniting hair . . . I Des Moines Is to be their future The new company will be a memberi and dothing of the young women. ! An unknown negro was ly ncbed. horae of the North Carolina National Their screams brought members of! near kockport. Miss., Saturday by aj .Tne rounding out of the cycle of Guard. . Uhe party to their assistance and after j mob composed of abouJ fJy men?UmbiUons of the normal man leads la hard struggle in which Ed. Bau-!"er he bad shot and killed Daniel. oack to mother earth, whence we A charter has been issued to thejcom and c. A. Pritchard. cousins of Basley, a white farmer. j all sprung," continued Mr. Brown. Atlas Manufacturing Company of ! Gracie Baucom, were'also burned, the; " . ; The farmer's boy. Irked by the la- Bessemer City which was organized j flame8 were extinguished. Dr. Brooks i Ten thousand dollars In currency j borg Qf the fiel aspIres lo he a mer. with a capital 100,000. The object! was cailed and arrived within twenty! was' 8tolen from mail p.ou5,, m chant in the nearby county-seat. The of the company is to operate a cotton ( rnInuteg antl Uev. A. c. Davis, father j transit between Tampa and )T'l merchant In such a town has an am mill. i of Wilma Davis, also arrived in half ! water Floriday, Friday night. Tbere j bmon tQ be a bankcr ln a jarge cUy jan hour. The doctor dressed theirl an elgbt-inch slit in the pouch jthe stat0 c&pii3il perhaps. And the The Biscoe Foundry and Machine WOUnds and it was hoped that the! when tne theft .was discovereti. ? tanker thnkg he would ie satisfied Company, at BIscoe, Montgomery , County, was totally destroyed by fire j Monday afternoon. The loss is ap proximately $10,000 with no insur ance. Rev. J. W. Lynch, pastor of First Baptist Church at Durham, has re signed to accept a call at Athens, Ga. Dr. Lynch served as pastor at Wake Forest for a number of years. He was very popular with his congrega tion. . Mr. Samuel B. Wray, of Went worth, Rockingham County, died last Saturday. He was Wentworth's old est citizen. It was only a few weeks ago that Mr. Wray and a lady of Wentworth ran away and were mar ried in Danville. Va. The main building of the Lambeth Furniture Co.'a plant at Thomasville was destroyed by fire Saturday eve ning. The blaze started In the main machinery building and was beyond all control when discovered. Th,e es timated loss is $35,000, with one third covered by insurance. The twenty-first annual meeting of the Woman's Missionary Union of the Baptist Church ln North Caro lina, which was held in Wilmington last week, came to an end Friday night. Miss Fannie E. S. Heck, of Raleigh, was re-elected President. The next meeting will be held in Wadesboro. . H. R. Smith, alias p. B. Smith, was arrested In St. Louis, Mo., Mon day oh the charge of swindling sev eral parties in Gates County, N. C. It is charged that he bought railroad ties" from certain parties in Gates County and paid them with worth less checks to the extent of $4,000 or more. Smith will be brought back to this State for 'trial. Quarrel Between Two Boys Ends Fatally for One. Wilmington, N. C, March 25. Bryant Kenneday. fourteen years old. died in the hospital here at 1030 o'clock to-night as the result of a knife wound In the breast inflicted P18 to marry her shortly.- Mr. Dor by Clarence Summerlin, about the sett however, thinks he will be un- aame age, a half-hour earlier in the store at the Delgado mill village. east of the city. The stabbing fol lowed a quarrel between the two boys. The county authorities were notified at midnight of the tragedy. ' Insane Drayman Tries to Wreck Home. Washington, N. C, March 27. - rntTi a11 110 T.iiaa tn& 1 Q-irtkai 1r1 crtYi of James Lucas, a colored city dray- man, suddenly lost his reason and became insane last night It seems that he and his father were attend ing church and during the services Cornelius lost his mind, became very boisterous and unruly for some time, interrupting the services and had to be taken out by main force. Arriv ing at home he proceeded to break the windows and demolish the prop1- erty, and: had to be taken to the city jail and locked up by the police. Lucas was a quiet, well-behaved ne gro and in the employ of Mr. G. H. Baker. Body of Walter Byrum Found in MiU Pond Near Monroe. Monroe, N. C, March 27. The body of Walter Byrum, a white man, lue JeaioUb' 01 uer ausuanu.. - rora aged 25 years, son of Mr. E. J. By- was captured ji few minutes later by rum, a prominent farmer of Vance the Plice and is in prison. The wo township. Union County, was found man fell over in the alley dead. this morning In a badly decayed con- dition in the waters of Stewart's mill Freight Train Runs Down Section pond. Some small boys fishing dls- ' Force One KiUed. covered the body clad in Sunday Cherryville, N. C, March 23. ' clothes, In shallow water, face down. Whi,le returning to Cherryville on a Byrum disappeared from home on ; the afternoon of January 22. His family went to church, leaving Wal ter to follow them. That was the last work on the track and roadbed sev seen of him alive. When noticed jeral miles west of here, was run down missing, they supposed that -he had left home as he has a- brother Jn Chicago whom he had talked of vis- iting. It Is supposed to be a case of suicide, as there -were; no signs of foul play, and it was-impossible for the drowning to have been accidental as the water of the mill pond is shal low around the edge. TWO WOMKX BCUXEf TO DEATH. Lamp KtpWIon Oaitaet teth of j mmem WUm Hails sad Craciej Ilaucom la Cnion County, Monroe, X. C, March 21. -At a f 1 quilting parly at tbe residence of C. i A. Pritcbard, In Union County, about j a mile from Olire Branch yesterday j evening, two young lad lea were burn-j td to death and one severely injured ! by the explosion of a lamp. The f Drown, p resident f the New York victims are Misses Wlima Daris aged A bill passed by the Legislature f Central lines. In discussing his com 20, and Grade aucon?f aged 16. Utah making the sale of cigarettes iR, retirement from the railway and The injured girl, Miss Lou Daucom. Is j in that State a misdemeanor, wasj saijcijii worlds and bis embarkation a younger cousin of Miss Grade Bu-i retoed by Governor Spry. f cpon ft new career as stock breeder com. The young ladies were In a bed-! - " " - - i girls wouid recover, but just as he reached his home In Olive Branch this morning about 7 o'clock. Rev. Davis received a telephone message that his daughter, Wilma, was dying. She died before he reached Pritch ard's home and Miss Bralce Baucom died within 15 minutes of Miss Davis. Miss Baucom was the daughter of H. L. Baucom, former county com missioner of Union County, and Miss Davis is a daughter of Rev. A. C. Davis,' a well known Baptist minister. Mr. Ilaucom's Home Also Destroyed. Olive Branch, N. C, March 24. Miss Grace Baucom and Miss Wilma Davis were burned to death in a fire which destroyed the residence of- H. L Baucom last night. Burning ker osene from a lamp which had ex ploded, Ignited their dresses. Editor Saunders Fined for Display ing Weapon. Elizabeth City, March 25. This morning In trial justice court, W. O. Saunders, editor of the Indepen dent, a weekly newspaper, was fined $25 and costs for displaying a dead ly weapon on the street last night. It seems from the testimony that last night, following the adjourn ment of the mass meeting at the court house, Saunders was accosted by Will Hinton regarding a recent publication. Back of Mr. Hinton were several other young men. Saunders is said to have remarked that he was on his war home and that the first man who advanced on him he would shoot, at the same time displaying a big revolver in the direction of the young men. Attorney I.. M. Meekins, who rep resented Saunders, noted an appeal. Wanted Postmaster Dorsett to cure Divorce for Him. Se- Spencer, March 2 7. Postmaster J. D. Dorsett, of Spencer, has been appealed to by a former Spencerian, Gent. R. Harding, who now lives in Water Valley, Miss., to assist him in securing a divorce. In writing to Mr. Dorsett he states that he is now courting a woman in Mississippi who is wortn $25,000, and that he ex- aDle to secure the divorce at present Alexander County Farmer Commits Suicide. Taylorsville, "N. C, March 27. News reached here this morning that Daniel Austin, who v lived with his widowed mother, about twelve miles west of -Taylorsville, committed sui cide late- yesterday afternoon x by shooting himself with a shotgun. Jhe yunf hatl 3ust returned from a school entertainment in the neighborhood and immediately went to his room and committed the rash deed. His friends and relatives can not even surmise the .cause of his troubles. He was only eighteen years of age Jealous Negro Kills His. Wife on the Street. Wilmmgton, March 27. Angered because , she, had left home in com pany with a roomer " in their house Garfield Ford, a respectable sort o negro,' to-night shortly before mid night, shot and killed his wife Julia f Ford, in Price's section of tfie city, whither she had eone with Dave Nix- uu, wlureu wa cause 01 1 1 a 11 " m hand-car- about 7 o'clock this af ter- noon, the Seaboard Air Line section, - i force, whichs doing some repair by an extra eastbound freight train and John Henry, a member of the force, was instantly; killed. The ac cident happened two miles west of Waco, You can make good money solicit ing subscriptions for The Caucasian, Write' us forterms. , General Her O0 0 A half oillfoa dollars b& ta' sabscrfbed for a new cotton Bill at LaG range, us, The bill for woman suffrage P the IlHnoia State Senate, without! discussion, by a rote of 31 to 10. . Six firemen perished la a fire in .... . n.,4.. .t.f a Steamship Company and Two Rail roads Fined for. Discrimination in Hate. avananh, Ga., March 24. Judge Emory Speer, in the United States Circuit Court here, to-day imposed a fine of $20,000 on the Merchants' & Miners' Transportation Company for giving preferences in rates. The The corporation was (convicted here last Friday of having discriminated on rates on grain shipped from Philadelphia to Savannah and Jack sonville, Fla. Miller & Miller, of Philadelphia, the alleged enefici aries under the discrimination, were found not guilty. The Seaboard Air Line and the Atlantic Coast Line railroads were adjudged guilty and fined $2,000 each. Want More Recruits for the Army. v Washington, D. C March 23. Calls for six or seven thousand re cruits to bring the infantry regi ments of the army mobilized in Texas and California up to full strength, have been sent by the War Depart ment to all the army recruiting sta tions in the country. Two thousand recruits already have been sent to "the maneuver division" at San An- onio. To fill all the vacancies in he infantry, now in the South, be tween 6,000 and 7,000 more men will be required. Farmer and Two Officers Found Guilty of Peonage and Fined. Savannah, March 24. In the United States Court here to-day, J. F. Smith, a farmer, L. F. Reins, a constbale, and H. W. Heins, a jus tice of the peace, all of Bailey, Ap pling County, pleaded guilty to the charges of peonage. Judge Emory Speer fined Smith $2,000; L. F. Reins $500, and H. W. Reins $50. The men forced to work on Smith's farm were Tennessee mountaineers, who had come to Georgia seeking employment. Twenty-Two People Drown When Steamer Tarns Turtle. Victoria, B. C, March 25. The British Columbia Shipping Com pany's little wooden steamer Sech elt, built for passenger service on an jnland lake turned turtle off-Beeche Head, Vancouver Island late yester day and went down witn an on board, twenty-two passengers and the crew of four men. Thirteen passengers had landed at William head just before the steamer went out to destruction. CANAL WILL BE OPEN IN 1013. This is the Prediction of the Amer ican Society of Civil Engineers Who Have Returned From an In spection of the Work on the Big Bitch., New Orleans, March 23. Sixty members of the American Society of CiviL Engineers arrived in New Or- leans to-day ont he steamer Heredia, from Colon, Panama, where they went at the suggestion of President Taft to inspect the work done on the Panama Canal. ' Other members of the party returned direct to New xorjc irom uoion. It was announced that the repre- sensatives of the society who made the trip are unanimous .in tha ap proval of the work which has been done by Colonel Goethals, and they confidently believe the canal will be ready for service in 1913. 'The American people need not be alarmed at the reports of slides down there," said a membeV of the party. "This - feature of the work was not overlooked by- the Government engi neers who planned and have so suc cessfully prosecuted the construction of the canal. There have been nu merous slides in Culebra cut 'and near the Gatun dam, and there doubtless will be many smaller slides in the future, but the great work un dertaken by the United States will not be seriously interrupted. "Every one of the one hundred and forty members of the American So ciety of Civil Engineers who visited the i canal on this trip feels assured that the canal - will be ready for ser vice before the end of 1913." -IUCK TO IU151T SIXGS W. C imowx. Lat Uy l SoO.- Chir&. March 2S "'Back u the toll it noia raoresseat. it U as ia- tiartihe instinct of ever noma! The slaple life ti not a slo- fsa but as Inbred sentiment. These are the . words of W. C. tana rarmer. Mr and Mrs rjrown were at the rr . . .r if he could become president of a big railroad system. If he ever at tains to that ambition, be discovers that he would much rather be a farmer. "That is what I expect to be for the rest of my life a farmer and a breeder of fancy stock. In that work I know I will find the fullest meas ure of satisfaction; I will feel that I am really accomplishing something in the world." Mrs. Brown is In fullest sympathy with her husband's plans for the farm life. EIGHT KILLED IN WRECK. "Dixie Flyer" Goes Through Trestle Near Tifton, Georgia Wreck Was Caused by Broken Axle on Engine. Tifton, Ga., March 25. In one of the worst railroad disasters ever known In the South Atlantic States, eight persons were killed and more than a dozen injured when train No. 95, known as the "Dixie Flyer" on the Atlantic Coast Line, and running between Chicago and Jacksonville, Fla., went through a trestle over the Alapaha river, eighteen miles east of here early this morning. Tonight but one body, that of John T. Wat son, of Lander, Wyo., remained in the cars in the river. Had it not teen for the wreck Watson would have been a bridegroom today. His sweetheart, Miss Elsie Shippey, of Pasadena, who was on the train with him and to whom he was to have teen married in Jacksonville tomor row, remained at the wreck through out the day and night, watching the efforts of the rescuers to recover Watson's body. Late tonight it was said that the wreck had been thor oughly examined and that the death total will not be increased, as all passengers had been accounted for. All the wounded have been carried to the Atlantic Coast Line hospital at Waycross. . The bodies of the dead were removed to Tifton. The cars plunged into the river after an axle on the engine sudden-1 . ly snapped when midway of the tres tle. The , locomotive never left the track, but the tender was derailed and the tank tumbled to the bank of the stream. The trestle is about half . a mile long, but the river was low 1 and at the point of the accident was not more than fifty yards across. The express and baggage cars, two day coaches' and' one Pullman were piled in an indescribable mass in the cen ter of the stream. O. F. BomwarUof Henderson, Ky.,1 was instantly, killed, which his wife beside him escaped with slight in- juries. - , - Thirty Firemen ITJBeo-Bnjied Aloiig the Railroad Track. . v . Lexington, Ky.. March 24. Thirty men have been killed since the strike of firemen on the Cincinnati, New urieans & Texas racinc raiiroaa (the Queen & Crescent) was inaug - urated, according to authentic infor- mationreceived herA todav Most of them were neeroes workine as strike breakers and the majority were kill ed near Somerset. Ky.' The railroad company has made great effort to keep the real situation secret and! most of the dead men have beep j burlea aiong side tne railroad tracts without burial rites. . A second shooting occurred this evening near Helen wood when a strike-breaking fireman on a "south bound freight climbed out upon the tender, and was shot and wounded by strikers in ambush. He was rushed to . Chattanooga. V . A LIFETIME TROUBLE. Ingram, Texas. -"Ever since I be came a woman," writes Mrs. E. M. Evans, of this place, "I suffered from womanly trouble. Last fall, it got so bad, T had to stay In bed for near ly a week every month."- Since tak ing Cardul, I feel better than I have for years.". You can rely on Cardul. Prepared especially for women relieves womanly pain, by acting the cause, , and builds up womanly strength where it is most needed. Purely-vegetable; Mild, but certain in action. Try it. At your, drug gist's. , . . i j i " " ii i t r i ai run Farm Topic mil rATtf ukes run faju lie Fator Karly rtaaUftg f Corn aad Ott Aft Early Gardm CHa4 h CaacauOaa 1 In lUrtoony With Fanarrs tTaSoa. Editor CaseaaUa: -la the last li- sue ot your eactelieat pajcr Mr Irey snoke the tatimeaU of More of your readers li through say ppctloa where The Cancaalaa la ft welcose weekly visitor. 1 joia hlxa la all the praise he gives your paper, and hope the farza tolaacs may add aw laar els for each of yea I want to chal lenge the State of North Carolina oa gardenias. I ha?o bcea getting gardea greens la pleaty since March ltb, and I hereby ask all the read era of your paper not to sow their garden seed any later than January 20th any year. This has been my custom for six years and I have al ways been successful in having sal let from my garden by April 1st. On March 4th, the day Mr. Taft was inaugurated aa President, I Be gan planting corn ln lowland, and hare never housed a better crop from the land. On April 5th the same year I began planting cotton (only ten acres) as an experiment and I made a full crop from the said land. This was the early King variety. I take personal pride in seeing your paper so much withthe farmers and the Farmers' Union, and I want to ask all the members of the Union to well consider what Is before them, as planting time Is drawing near, ij have been president of my local union three years. I will not write any more at present, as I am expecting something better from some one else; i so come along, gentlemen, and let's help a good cause. , LEWIS B. PATE. Goldsboro, N. C, March 27th. Farmers' Union Growing. A Farmers' Union was organized at Wilson last Saturday. A good number of fanners were present and much interest was manifested in the meeting. Other county unions will be organized in the near future as follows: Bertie County, at Mars Hill. May 17th. ; Hertford County, at Ahoskie, May 18th. Northampton County, May 19 th. .. Ged Rid of the Pessimist on the t Farm." In a recent address the Secretary. of Agriculture, Hon. James Wilson, used this sentence: . "Get rid of the pessimist on the farm; he is dan gerous; The farm is not the place for the man who is not hopeful." 'The dream ot the man who writes this column is that the time may come when the pessimist willbe per sona non grata everywhere. After all, there is no place for him. In busi ness, in the professions, on the farm i a everywnere ne is decidedly a menace. Hopefulness is a necessity and essential to success. T. W. C, In Charlotte Observer. Caldwell's Champion Potato Raiser. Lenoir News. Mr. J. Calvin Coffey, our champion potato raiser, who lives In the Mul berry Creek Valley, sold last week four hundred bushels of fine potatoes. LK on a .rt. f nif crop .f i.auu Dusneis wnicn ne n arrested. Mr. Coffey finds ready sale for his potatoes at good prices and finds it one of his most profitable crops. Science on the Farm. Monroe Enquirer. "It is an inspiration to see how farmers are studying Improved meth- ods of farming," says Mr. T. J. W. Broom, who has beea on a tour through a number of the eastern and PImont countIes recently. "Every- i wnre iney are waiting up to tne ! growing of larger crops and to soil improvement," Mr. Broom continued, "and this year they are coin at it with more intelligence than ever be- fore." , j: No More Galluses or Cowhide Boots. ' Whe the railroads are being pep- pered with advice on scientific re .uu;wwu 01 .eiPnse. ana city 10IK rnE TO YGlRfr SISTER WtshtoooatiBfi. 111 t . . . is f v m ' s wlllnolntprwHVr oarysnousxzeentsa weeic or less than two centa boat-j nSerUrmX fwork or occupation. )nt mss m jm ssse ssJ tttt, tell me bowy 5!?? "dJ fend you thetreatment for TonxeaaTenttrfaJn lata wr? 1 ar 1 u n aia iMmpni vrn sm .aw a 11 . . - , nn aiu nfnfnl or lrwilT-r ?r? Wkaa 017 cures xeneorrnoem, ureen sc2i g v irrepuar Menatrnadbn in young Ladies, Kumpness and health always results ft eU any auflerS?tn Ja te ladles of your own locality who know and will gl rtroS vbiJ&l KfTnwtaat really csrts all women's Oiaeaa, and makes women 1 thVbwkV5Sbust- i9tt r aiim. and the free tendaFs treatment is youraj tdr. as you may not ee this offer agsitu ddrea i -.3. C3. Czx h - - Ccuth Dcnd, tnd., v.f 23 YEARS Mrs lXt Eabft, , Texas, writes: Tor tftta ty-three rears 1 was ft coa st&at Bu2ttx frets chrceto cfttarra Xha4 ft erere mis try and burn ; lr.g In the top cf ray head. There was al j ttnuaJ drop plag of mucus i i i : i V Into ray throat. which caused frequent ex pec to ration. My entire ys- lent gradually became in o 1 v e d. and my conamon Mrs. J. H. DourUM. grew worse. X had an incessant cough and frfqwt attacks of bilious eoUe, from which it seemed I could not recover. Uy bo-mt also became affected, causing alarcOnc attacks of bemoiTriajres. I tried rua? remedies, which gave only tempor&rr relief or no relief at all. I at last trie4 Peruna. and in three days I was re lieved of the bowel derangement A fur using: five bottles I was entirely cured. I most cheerfully recommend the um cf Peruna to any one similarly ajnicttd." are wrought up over local pontics and the management of public-oerviee corporations, attention must be call ed to 4he fact that the old conven tional !dea of the farmer must W changed, for the present-day agricul turist is a different being. , Now, the keen eye of the railroad magnate can see where the farmer to letting millions of dollars go to w&m but perhaps the farmer, on the other hrpd, can show the railroad mas a thing or two. The gaunt, poorly clad individual of former days, with demoralized 'galluses the tradition al cowhide boots, jeans and un bleached "hickory shirt, belongs to a past day and age. To-day, when three fair hogs can be sold for a hundred dollars apiece each season, and when good money can be had on farm products, such "luxuries' as col lars, cuffs, derbies and neckties har a ready sale at the village tore. While the subject of the cost of production is being Investigated by scientists, the farmer has unostenta tiously, but practically, been glrtu the same problem effective attention. -"Affairs at Washington," Joe MiUb ell Chappie, In the National laa zlne for April. cuting Mrs. Haynie. Shreveport, La., March 25. Rep resenting the family of the deceased. Attorney N. W. Outlaw, of Goldsboro. N. C, arrived here to-day to Investi gate the killing of C. G. Kornegay. a railroad rate clerk formerly of that city, with a view of .assisting the State's force in the prosecution of Mrs. Leo tab. Haynie, who is Im prisoned here for fatally shooting Kernegay through jealousy. The grand jury, which convenes the last of April, will investigate the case and the trial will follow im mediately. Only yesterday Mrs. Haynle's bos- band made announcement that he would be in Shreveport as soon as he could wind up his business af fairs and would spend every cent he had in the attempt to clear his wife of the charge of murder. . Seaboard to Expend $2,000,000 'or New Equipment and Supplies. Baltimore, Md., March 23. It was announced here to-day that the Sea board Air Line Railway is about to expend $2,000,000 for new equip ment and supplies. Bids will be ask ed for twenty-five locomotives, I.JO freight. cars and 15,000 tons of steel rails for delivery without delaj. It was added, to meet the requlremests of the rapid growth of traffic ln U South. Free to Yvu and Every Sister Bus erlng from Woman's Aliments. iKmawoxnaa; Know woman's wrfferLorm. I hare found thcture, A2??w an 7 charge, nsy tew k' BSSlwlta full ln8traction to mar cofferer tr wonsaa'f ailxaenta. I want to tell t9 women ti tMS eure-fM, my reader, for rottrseif. J aaognter, jour mother, or your later. 1 tell you htm to cure younselTea t home wWr oxii ine nelp of s doctor. Tftn riant nr rl women's safieringm. What we women ksovn pj1act, we know better thaa any doctor. -know thas myhome treatment is safe mod enrefortjscwTtoessrtflsasiccaercM, mcmnm. ttsetBtBt trfsSkc ct tat tm. httw, tcif hriott.tttft r Cvartta Tawra. r CnvtU; a tf asai, back safl benls. feearisf tfsv fMiart. trmasta. rtttshs fas&s ft tf m, SMiaacasfy, gatta ti n. Jt Cuatt, VMrtana, Hiatf. aai t!sr tndbin o tf stkaMsts ascssiar to onr sex. I want to send you a !m irft tcSiaffrMto prove to you that yoa eaaeo yoorself at noma, easily, qniekly aoa .KlTethe treatment a eomplets trial: and "J1 iirar; tnemTl" r
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
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March 30, 1911, edition 1
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