Newspapers / China Grove Record (Salisbury, … / Nov. 24, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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V V i . -1. .. . . V - f ' -.7 i - 9 jDHINA Gr-C7I!, IT. 0. ' vjv .yty h-:v :; i--h v J," lit- ;1 ..-.I'f; i '::r.vA v.. t :. i v.-':. . ) 1 ;J;-.i;'..n,v-' I -s J" k Jft V- "ir 4:.k - I;.-' -. to , r'v ' ': . . m. -.. . . '4'; j: ' , ' t"V:V "H-i"- t J VI' , BOfl'T, SUFFER V's Like a New P cTson. tayahlrs. Hamilton. f i.a..'(i Kew CaaUt, Ind. "Aram the time ' , )i WM leven yfelurs old until I wu seven teen I suffered each month so I had to be in bed. ; I had head- " ache, backache and' such pains I . would cramp dotible every ' monthlu . I 'did not know what it was-; to be easy a minute. My health was dl : run down and r the .doctors did , not ' do me an7 eood.' A XUIIIIIIIIIOHJ at;;';L- ; ; Ir4-' v EL Inkham's Vegetable Compound and" I - ;'-:v-':. took :'it,:',and: now" I feel like a new , . i iperson. ' ; I idon't' suffer any more and I .f . amiregulareverymontK''Mrs.HAZEL f 'iVv:-PVnLPN 822 Soth 15th St 'i'' ' years,' steadily growing ' in popolarHy :nd' ;, 'influence, and thousands -upoa " thousands of -women declare , they owe tneir health to it, is it not reasona ble to believe that it is an article of jgreat merit? ; :i ; -, ... v. "' vtlf you want special advice writ to Xydia ;E; Pinfcham Medicine (confidential), Xiynn, Mass. xour letter will be opened, read 4 'ifcV' il - ' and answered by a won held In strict confidence. mtt v : n " ''j ' ' and answered by a woman and Tfie Iiarc Bottle fbj? 25 When you buy Yager's Lini ment von tret. splendid value! The large 25 cent bottle contains four times more than the. usual bottle' Of lini znent sold at that price. Try it for rheomatism, neuralgia, sciatica, sprains, cats and bruises. AtandWers price 25 cents. ... rsr LYiLLa jGtLBKBT BBOS. CO. Baiting "(fr a( 4e fMEB,l sanur sasar coaua. smauaose. race, zsev MisiAiiment.' ..- . I found your ion was suffering! rom Nostalgia, my dear madam.' "vMercy me, doctor! I never dreamed It waa so serious as all that. I thought the boy was only a little homesick. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOKIA. that famous eld remedy for lnfanis and children, and see that it Bears the Bignatoreof In Use for Oyer SO Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Norway has a total membership of 25,000. trade-union (Ieat Eaters9 Backache Meat lovers are apt to have back aches and rheumatic attacks. Unless yon do heavy work and get lots of fresh air, don't eat too much meat. It's rich in nitrogen and helps to form uric acid a solid poison that irritates the nerves,- damages the kidneys and often causes dropsy, gravel and urinary , dis orders. Doan's Kidney Pills help weak kidneys to throw off uric acid. Thousands recommend them. A North Carolina Case ' C. C. Townsend, 460 Arlington St., Greensboro, N. C, days: "I had such a bad case of kidney disease that I didn't think I would get rid of it. The pains in my back were almost unbearable and it was hard for me to Gtocp. My kidneys acted far too freely. Doan's Kidney Pills helned me so much from ithe first that I -continued using them and was restored to good health. It has been several years since I have had any further trouble from my kid neysVuv? ?:; t" GetDeaasatAayStat.S3aBox DO AW S 'VfJLV FOCTEK-MILBURN CO. BUFFALO N.Y. ' "fBiyr. Major, -lm ' fowl (w a oW bcaiJ wiibkyfT ; -7 . "Tlwit t jny. ilnir boy. Mott rthins i batter 6 MM Hmm trtuiky, r uy othtr aleokoUc UnraUat, but tW rr bat (bins soalb. or cd Or hroacbHi i thai : M wwu fcoowa Wrntd tnr Uxhtn twd to wt Boschee's German; Syrup ' Has for the last 51 years been steadily . -1 used 40 all parts of the civilized worlds 1 fOrthe rapid relief of colds, coughs, bron- Tchitis. throat and lung Irritation. . No 4 : other remedy has such a wrnarkable' ref nrd af widennread ltributibrl. 2SC- , and 75c. sizes at druggists everywhere.'1 WsK JSV - a g'liMMipaiayiaBl Wx t Eft NOTES Cist His Occurred Dzri ths 7c:l TfcrK2fe:3t Ttis Cc::tr " v EVEI1TS OF IHPOJITAIICE Gathered From All Parts ef Globe and Told In Short" - Paragraphs. the Domestic . k O. D. Bleakley of Franklin, Pa., representative-elect to the next congress, made an aeroplane flight from Phila delphia to Washington in his own bi plane. - The Cotton Manufacturers' Associa tion of New Bedford, Mass., announce an increase of 10 per cent in the wages of the operatives. This makes 27 per cent increase Jn the wages, of New Bedford'this year alone. ; Heads of railroad employees broth erhoods, determined that the Adamson eight-hour law shall not be broken down, have' conferred with President Wilson, and declare it is their pur pose to aid ih every way in fighting the injunction suits against the law. . A report . presented to the people's relief committee for Jewish War suf ferers, holding a meeting in Boston, Mass., . says that in certain sections of Poland, all babies had died from lack of nourishment. A New London, Conn., dispatch con tains the information that the colli sion which caused the merchant sub marine Deutschland to abandon her return voyage to Germany almost at its outset when a convoying tug, the T. A. Scott, Jr., was sunk with acrew of five .men, was the subject of fed eral investigation. It is agreed, ac cording to the dispatch, that the sink ing of the tug, was purely accidental, and the crew of the Deutschland was in no way culpable. New York City advices say that a gigantic plan. described as "one of the largest in the history of the world without ' interest" is to be raised to place the Jews of Europe definitely beyond the reach of suffering after the war. Bleached cotton fiber, including lin ters and hull fiber, used in the manu facture of- gun cotton and explosives of all kinds during the Quarter end ing June 30, exceeded anything in history. Former United States Judge Wil lidfin H. Brawley is dead at Charles ton, S. C. He was a former member of. congress, and was appointed fp the bench by Grover ,.: Cte4lnv:t-; j ioJli:3!3U t.JX, atlheage of 56. sShe was a rglnianrand a niece of 4 President JohnTylefe It is stated that prompt and final decision of the United States Supreme court in "the railroad 8-hour contro versy is possible, and is expected in the leading centers of the country, as every section is anxious that the matter shall be settled for good and all. European War .After having been for many months men without a country, the Serbians are again to establish their capital on native soil. Monastir, in southern Ser bia, for which the entente forces have been struggling since the advance from their base at Saloniki began, has been evacuated by the German and Bulgarian forces and occupied by the French and a considerable number of Serbs. The capture of Monastir by the en tente allies, in the opinion of military critics, means that the Balkans are practically controlled by the allies. With ythe investiture of Monastir the railway line from the entente allied base at Saloniki now is in entente hands entirely. s The British report taking 20 German officers and 752 men prisoners in the Ancre sector November 18. In western Wallachia, the advance of the Austro-Hungarians Continues steadily, and Campulung, eighty miles northwest of Bucharest, the Rouman ian capital, is almost within the grasp of the, German invaders. More than twenty-one hundred pris oners were taken by. the Austro-Hun garians in the latest operations in Wal lachia. Rungul mountain in Moldavia; east of Kenzivas Arhely, has been carried hy Bavarian troops. .' ,N The town of Barakli, on the Tight bank' of the Struma river and on the eastern end of the Macedonia front, has been occupied by British troops. ' On the western Macedonian front in the Monastir region, the Germans re port all attacks of the entente force have been, repulsed. v o , While the British were advancing their front north bf the Ancre river or consolidating their newly won po sitions, the French and Germans were engaged in violent combats, both north and south of the Somme. Thirteen thousand Belgians are re ported to have been deported to Ger many, and it is stated that the Ger mans plan to take some three hundred thousand more." They will be put to work in Germany, it is stated. - A disp'atch from Beirut, Syria, says that a war tribunal has passed a sen tence of r cron Hussein Kemal vafsii Pasha, sultan cIgypt, on' the, ground that he placed under foreign rule con stituent ; parts of the Turkish empire, The" death sentence has been con flrmed, according to an Amsterdam, -The, French and Serbian, trobps are I. ' i.x-.' r - - rvpunwiAX nave ,'capvureu.' ' s severarj towns to ithe east -and southeast otH Monastir,; and. continue' to - mako. de4 cisive gainst; - i Bad weather is hampering the -oper- ations on the western front. . ? Berlin i reports. that5 the : fighting of Noyember; 18; was decisively ;Infavo; of ILe German arms both against ,,thg : French and British lines in the west-. rn zone. 1 - - . ? In -the Adige valley and upper Butt regions, where the Italians and Aus? trians have been fighting constantly for some time, the Italians seenTtd have had the best of It. ' ' r- According to a report presented ; to the people's relief committee for Jew5, ish war ' sufferers, in session in- Bos ton, not a child under five years t ot age can be found, in' the large areas of Poland. - - , A Norwegian torpedo boat is report ed to have fired upon a German steam- er which refused to stop when pass- insr Stavensrer. ' then boarded - the-. steamer and dismantled her wireless. Mexican . ' - " Luis Cabrera and hia" colleagues on the Mexican-America joint commis--sion were formally told by Secretary of the Interior Lane chairman of the American commission, on Just what terms an agreement providing for the withdrawal of the American punitive, expedition and the protection of life and. property along thf international border may be reached. Fortified by the assurance of Presi dent? Wilson that he will back the American representatives of the Mexi can-American joint commission. Secre tary Lane returned to .Washington, where he immediately went into con ference with Dr. J. EL Mott and Judge George Gray, the otherj American com missioners, informing them in detail of the conference he had -at Washing ton with President Wilson. 'i The last plan placed before the Mex icans of the joint commission is noth ing new to them. It has been gone over in sessions of the commission time and again and will not require a long explanation. -' An unidentified Amreican was kill ed when a Villa hand took Jimlnez, and four Americans were seen under a guard of bandits at Parral during Villa's occupation of that town. Refugees to El Paso, Texas, state that the district between Parral and Jimlnez has been cleared by Villa's followers has been cleared, by Villa's followers fbf more than two hundred Chinamen. Washington , . An Athens, Greece, dispatch says the German, Austro-Hingarian, Bulga- rians and TTirkishTnmisterft tO;Gre weece.-: ' "-j- ' Mx&l It is announced in Washington that the American legation has' undertaken the protection of Austrians, Turks and Bulgars in Greece, but that the Spanish legation will take charge of German interests. Athens dispatches states that stu dents of the Athens, Greece, univer sity, tried to pass resolutions at a mass meeting urging the king to es pouse the cause of the allies. A gen eral fight ensued and the police quelled the disorder. Announcement that a German sub marine sank the British liner Arabia made a' deep impression on official Washington. 4.. ' A portentous and complicated inter national situation now faces President Wilson; and for the next few weeks will engage his attention and that of his advisers to the practical exclusion of all but the most urgent of domestic subjects. From now on the president expects to deal with all foreign questions with out embarrassment and he is receiv ing from his advisers a summary of the outstanding issues so essential to taking stock of the basic situation which must be met now that interna tional relations' have returned to their place of prime importance. , It is not evident in Washington that there will be any fundamental change in the pre-election policy of President Wilson, and all fear that any move at all will be misinterpreted as in spired by internal political feeling, it seems, has been removed. " An Athens, Greece, dispatch brings the information that Vice: Admiral Fournet, ; commander-in-cntef of he Anglo-French : "fleet ' Ih jthe Mediterra nean, has presented to 'the' Greek gov ernment a npte demanding the (Sur render to the entente allies : of 'all arms, munitions' and artillery 1 of the Greek army, with the exception of the arms in actual use. 1 ' . , . The state department has issued this interesting statement: 'A large num-' ber of ' suits ' Attiqkihg the constitution ality of ' the 1 Adainson : la hive ; been institution ' ih various parts of the United States.' The department of justice will ' take direct charge of these cases and Mr. Frank Hagerman of Kansas City, : Mo.,-has been retain ed to assist in their preparation and trial.". --: .-. -.; ' - ;a - v.;, .' V-,. ; A Paris, France, dispatch says that extraordinary" weather conditions : pre vailing ih France cnilminated in' a tidal wave In -the; Gulf of Marseilles, on; the jyiediterranean coast,m which many; vessels foundered' and disastrous gales on the southwest coast of the' Atlantic ocean. v 1 ' Suits by railroads attacking the con stitutionality of the eight-hour rail road law have been filed in many parts Of , the .country, audi the department of justice" laid plans to defend them. No offer has yet been made by the railroads to settle the, question bygone test case, ' lipt! iiC'hiliQ -m mmm m m '-.'V;Tr a m mm m mm. amm. tmm IliVAklO Bi' Julllib DECISION, SAYSOURT, BASED . ON MATURE CONSID ERATION OF, MERIT. , tt FIRST-TEST CAE IN COURT Elgnt-tWr Law Held Unconstitutlon "l by iudge Wlllianv. C. Hook In -United States District CourtKan . ; sasVcity Appeal .Taken. -;:;!.-; Kansai Vcty,v -1ufo! :The Adamson eight-hour law was held unconstitu tional here fcy Judge William C.1 Hook in the; United States District Court. The court made I it plain" that' the de cision' was? not based on ; mature -consideration of . the ' iertts. , oftthe : case but n expe'dlency desired by all par ties at interest because of the eces ilty of a final decision by the Supreme Conrt of United 'States before Janu$ ary next, when "the : law goes, into The legal moves in ; the process Fof sending the case direct to the highest court of r the land were somewhat ind volved from ; the lay points of view, but the lawyers concerned rushed the matter through with a speed seldom witnessed in t courts, of. lawvThese events transipred In court by agree-' 1 -Counsel for the recelverfir asked that "their, bill':for an injunction be granted and the Adamson -law be d clared nnll jand void. 2- Mr. Hagerman for the Govern- tment asked the court t3 dismiss the hill and to ' declare the law constitu tional. y 3 Court overruled Mr. Hagerman and declared the law invalied. 4 Preparation of a transcript of the evidence for presentation to the Supreme Court was begun and it was expected that the mails would deposit copies in Washington at once. 6 Council for the receivers were instructed to notify counsel for all railroads of the moves made here and to invite them to join in the case be fore the Supreme Court. WILSON GETS TELEGRAM OF BEST WISHES FROM HUGHES. Republicanandidatcr; Conffratii fates Lsdtewoed: J.--;h.yE. lHuhesJ .M.J! : -A.. .fc . - . ... iLAm. -t 'y- , - . Toceofc luecuon: sent 10 tresiaeui. son a telegram congratulating him upon his- re-election. In his telegram Mr. Hughes' said: I "Because of the closeness , of the vote I have awaited the official count in California and noW that it has been virtually completed, permit me to ex tend to you my congratulations upon your re-election. I desire also to ex press my best wishes for a successful administration." JACK LONDON, NOTED . AUTHOR, DIES SUDDENLY. Santa Rosa, Cal. Jack London, the author, died at his Glen Ellen, Califor nia, ranch near here, a victim of uremic poisoning. London wis taken ill during the night and was found' un conscious early in the day by a ser- v?nt who went to Ua room t0 awaken him. His condition at first alarmed his sister, Mrs. Eliza Shepard, who sum moned physicians from this 'city. It was at first believed that the author was a victim of ptomaine poisoning but' later it developed that he was suffering from a severe form of ure mia. Dr. J. Wilson Shields of San Francisco a close friend of the writ er, was summoned during the day and declared that the patient's condition was serious. HIGH COST OF PAPER SENDS NEWSPAPERS UP. Johnstown, Pa. Announcement was Wade by three local daily newspapers that their price would be increased to two cents on December 1, owing to the high cost of print paper. The newspapers, are The Tribune, Leader, and Democrat. - BANDITS STEAL $40,900 CASH IN CHATTANOOGA. Chattanoora, Tenn.- Currency total ing $40,900 was .estimated to have been stolen from a Southern Express Company transfer wagon in .the WepBrn & Atlantic Railroad .yards here hy two white men who held up the lone driver, Tred Corneilsoh, who: said the bandits forced 'him to unlock a box containing approximately-1100,-QOO in currency. . The robbery , took place in the heart of the business district. '. ' -.rj-'r':; V" 1 LABOR FEDERATION AGIN ST I TEACHING OF MILITARISM." i Baltimore.The American' Federa tion of Labor' went on record aa being opposed to ' what it characterized as 'the' teaching of' mflitarism"' in -the public schools.. Long debatesfrecd el the action which was contained' i alcommittee resolution finally adopW by the Federation's annual conven tln -' now -in session ; hereby There Js I pnusually. ' large amount , of "ul; uni iMiarsi mn mm .msiHr inr -:.(--: n. - - mmmmW ' mmwm mm .mmmm ... .iv.mv.i i v-" m Ll'- and ovlJrcome the attack,' . -f : does not 'andrertlate.' When yt are wesJt after lli- reruns Tsbiets are iwuMirrhrfM)hfnlTaik: Effect. When catarrh distresses TOO. Penma Tablets will help yoor system 1 BtsnsQn Tablets are a delightful laxative. Stroojc cathartics weaken, ana si -.reaction. r .MaruOin ismildk gnoUr vrgiiur the inner to actsoo. and will ba&xxnd as safe aa ,iney are pleasant. By their use as dLeted, the fasott of consapsaoo is nsnsiiy cweicoge. For children and hrrands the treatxoexitU safe arid satisfactory. Any drug store canaup&hr yoo.,;Get a box today. ,;tut PPPfTNA CCMPANY ,0. Columbus. Ohio -'-.:Hla' Maflnificent Memoi-y. : f-;r-7 "phildren," ' squeaked r the ." ancient man, T.3fcan" remember, just-s .well as if It was yesterday wlien I. was a boy, and beefsteak 'and potfooIfwere o cheap that we ' hsd .'em at' our house 'most every day,' and rere 'always per mitted to, eat all we wanted , of 'em. Oh; Ilteli yei've . goN a vuderful---' ee-hee I hee l-r-memory 1" : 1t ; '-- Later the j&ildren said ainoifg them seryes : jTruly, Uncle Gulliver has ,ah amazing memory he can;- recollect' things that could not 'possibly have happened."-uisas: City r Star. v OF INTEREST TO MOTHERS t Thecost of food today Is a serious matter to Jail of ,you. T Toi cut down your foodbilla nnd at'thesame time improve- the? Jhealth - of your family, serve them -Skinner's Macaroni and Spaghetti two brthree times per week; Children love It and thrive on It It is ' the best possible "food ' for adults. Write the. Skinner -Mfg. Co.. Omaha. Nebr' for beautiful cook boekjtelllng how to serve ' It n ' a hundred ways. ways. It's free toevery mother, Adv.. ,i. a wvsaw 0 Maude Is -y charming girl, eh?" "Charming? I should say so. I never-saw but one - man hard-hearted enough tp resist her." "Who was that?" The marble statue in the park." Florida Times-Union. . - : ever Ton Need a General Tonic v y Take Grove's . The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable aT'a Gen eral Tonic because it contains the wall known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds op the Whole System. 50 cents. , ' : -7 Happy Effort, . "Truly a felicitous speed! has a stvlo . cr-" alli-his owrkr Hnm riilustivhere does the felicity ctiit yv-: ' fi&MM s M OTHER'S. 10 Y SALVE for Colds, Croup, Pneumonia and Asthma ; GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT for Neuralgia, Rheumatism and Sprains. For sale 'by all Druggists. GOOSE GREASE COMPANY, MFB'S- Greensboro, N. O. Adv. The New Reading. "When there is a will there way." . "Yes; a way to break It." Is a If yon suspect that your child lias Worms, a slBffls doss of Dr. Peerys Dd Shof will settlo the qaestlon. Its action upon the Stomach and Bowels Is beneficial In either case. No second , dose or alter jrar sattre necessary. Adv. For renovating a lawn at any sea son a new sod roller has spikes that punch holes in the soil. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong, sick women well, no alcohol. Sold in tablets or liquid. Adv. t. " "Sympathy is two hearts tugging at one load." Selected. DO YOU BET UP WITH A LAL1E BACK? Have You RlieumaUisme; Kidney Jiver ror Bladder Trouble ? Pain or dnH ache in the back is often evidence of kidney trouble. It is Nature's timely warning to show yoa that the track of health is not clear. - - Danger 8lgnala. . If these danger signals are unheeded more serious result may be expected; kidney trouble in its worst form may steal upon you. ' . Thousands of people have testified that the mild and immediate effect of Swamp Root,, the great kidney, liver, and bladder remedy, is soon realized that it stands the highest for its remarkable curative effect in the most distressing caaes. . If you need a medicine, you should have the best. - Lame Back. . Lame back is only, one of many, symp toms . of kidney trouble. Other symp toms showing that you may need Swamp. Root are, being subject to embarrassing and frequent bladder : troubles ;day ana SPECIAL NOTE You may obtain a sample tire bottle of Swanm-Hoet Trvift-tn. ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamtoi NifYyThi r5e?: to prove jthe remarkable merit W this med., valuable information, containing many of thethtmsaidTof pfteM letteVf rred from men. and women who say they found Swamp-Root to be hist tha TrJ!fSJ!2 in kidney, Wand bladder troubfes. mSit well known that our readers are advised to send for a sanrolTaiL tJ aaa ! Jrw Kilmer dV Co, Binghamton, N. Y. When writins 2 MtiSt.!!!. i i i i I :i l -it ii . i ii ii I I ii VVi; y:?;i I i r u rs , .... v -, - .1 : iviy IliUlIE Cold foe 4T . A' m m. . '. m ' When you feel yourself taking cold. .Pmhim ToJN m lilrehr to rhtrV taste rood. Fei-uris Tablets win fatvisorata to ridkself of this disease ; c eroiioweaoy "ZOU "should " know j the re truth about , shot shells. You can have sample Black Shells : VFree-alsp ahooklet of information on how to make important tests. When 70a have made these tests you wiUfaibw what shell Has tie quickest, strongest pri-' ' " xner, the best parhrrn and great-' . est, penetration and most re : liable vraterproDfinj - Vt - .BLAaispiis Just send , this advertisement f back to tzs wifhyour name and addresa and that of your amma- : nition Mealer written ott the . marghi. We will sex& iminedl- .- ately an ordejf iqr the thzee free coeuiTDm youTGeaiers stoqtc -;mTsACrr OLD FALSf TEETH BUY We piy from $1.28 up to $5 a set, also buy bridgework, old cold aHverand plat mum. "Can give you the 'Central Bank of this city as reference, ; Mail to v - BerwHi Brts. Ot, Dsyt. 9, Bscfcerfer, W. T. APPENDICITIS IKUIOaaTION, GAS or padn In tke Tight C D C t side write tor ymlle Boek of In formation T ft C C fca.swwsas, wn. w-s.aia aaiaaoas rr Those Wedding Bells, ' ' Abe Did you get the operascorel Pandora Yeah they were tied in the last minute of the play. " : . ' The earth under a blanket of snow Is usually ten . degrees warmer than the air above It. ' ' Granulated Erellds. 6 ties. Inflamed Kjreo relleTed over alsht by Roman Eye- Balsam. One trial, proves its merit. Adv. A full-grown .- elephant pounds of Ivory. yields 120 night, frriUtioh, sediment, etc " l '.Lack of control, - smarting, uric ' acid, dimness, indigestion, . sleeplessness, nerv ousness, sometimes the heart acts badly, rheumatism, , bloating, lack of ambition, may be loss of flesh, sallow eoinpiexion. y Prevaleney of KIdnsy OUexse. i" v Host people do not realize the alarm- , increaaa and remarkable prevaleney or kidney disease. While . kidney - dis orders .: are among the ; most . , common daases that prevail, "they. are sometimes" the last recognised by patients, who very often content themselves with doctor in the ejects, -while the original disease may constantly undermine the system. . - golafifty W d . onedoHar;. sIm hotUes ai an drug stores; r.cvypi -Don't make' any miske, but remember the name. Dr. Kilmer's 8wamp-Root. and the : address .Binghamton,- N. . Yv. which you. wiU find on every bottle. : mm? if ( and aWkri cnaf rsf tiaiattr fating tirtm : XVIsusxxxa, G2uIZa axtt k vyh' ' 1 "J xCSt. rsn xgTA. , . . 1 ,v ' if .0 !-. m$c&k Y wws;: ci t rJ?$$ r; Z; -y' h ly
China Grove Record (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 24, 1916, edition 1
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