Newspapers / The North State (Lexington, … / March 20, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
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p iff tt9! if it I 1 51 -3$&&S& :$ 1 S?MMIW, 1 m 4 rm W. A. Mitchell, dealer in general merchandise, Martin, Ga., writes: My wife lost in -weight from 130 to ffSSpounds. We saw she could not live hong. She was a skeleton, so we con- fsulted an old physician. He told her to try Pernna. She gradually commenced im- iproving and getting alittle strength. fShe now weighs 106 pounds. She is rjaining every day, and does her own thonse work-and cooking it Peruna is sold by your local drug gist. Buy a bottle today. OFFERED WORTHY YOUNG PEOPLE NO matter how limited your mean 8 or educa tion, if you wish, a thorough. business training and good position, write today for Our Great Half-Rate Offer. Success, inde pendence and probable FORTUNE guaran teed. Don't delay write, today. GA ALA. BUS. COLLEGE, MACON, GA. Don't Push The horse can draw the load without help, if you reduce friction to almost nothing by applying regime to the wheels. No other lubri cant ever made wears so long and saves so much boorse power. Next time try Mica Axlb Grxask. Standard Oil Co. Ium pin HICKS' CAPUDINE IMMEDIATELY CURES HEADACHES Breaks up COLDS IN 6 TO 12 HOURS Trial Bool 10c At Droisa As are the times, so are the man ners.- so. n-707. Bad Symptoms. ie woman who has periodical head- caches, backache, sees imaginary dark Cpots or specks floating or dancing before Jier eyes,nasnawing distress or heavy nil feeling ift Itotnach, faint spells, drag-.gtfng-dowrvaelfrag in lower abdominal or Slvic.rgfDn,'jeasily startled or excited, egulrfrof painful periods, with or with ' -OSS -rMvlc ''catarrh, is -suffering from weakntfces anduerangements that should nave eSfly attention. Not all of above ymptonU ace likely to be present in any -case at oiie itime. Neglected or badly treated and such mohq Jt( tn run into ma la flips which de man tjfe surgeon's knife if they do not tresucviataiiy. No medicine extanthassuch a Ion f And numpro reennx e nirea in sue Asp as Or. Pierce's Favorite Proserin Jto medicine hag i such a stroptr PTOfeS3i0l jnrlnrmpnt m Pact! nT ITS tnwoftfrnt-xyort.h mnrA than any A.njrtinftrv nn.jfrnjpinna l ts- ls." The 'very best ingredienTs -timonlal tinown to medical science for the cure of -woman's peculiar ailments enter into its composition. No alcohol, harm fuL or -habit-forming drug is to be found in the list ot its ingredients printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested under,, oath. In anv condition of the femalp. svstpm. "Dr. Pierce's Fa vdri to Prescription can do only good never harm. Its whole effect is to strengthen, invigorate and regulate tne vnoie iemaie system and especially "the pelvic organs. When these are de-xangr-d in function or affected by disease, the stomach and other omans of digestion become sympathetically deranged, the . nerves are weakened, and a long list of bad, unpleasant symptoms follow. Too much must not De expected of this "Fa vorite Prescription. " it will not perform UlUOVlt "HI uuu UlU L Li I II U 1 3 1AJ JXlt5Vi- 4cine will.: It will often prevent them, if itaken iri time, and thus the operating table and the surgeon's knife may be "xvoided. Women suffering from diseases of long . standing, are invited to consult Doctor Pierce by letter, free. All correspondence is held as strictly private and sacredlv -confidential. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, .Buffalo, N. Y. - Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser (1000 pages) Is sant free on receipt of 21 one-cent tamps for paper-covered, or 31 stamps .xor ciotn-Douna copy. Aaaress as a Dove. - Clothes. To be a leaaer of fashion one jnust be a follower. The man.bp paysvthe 1 compliment is not always the man who pays for the. gown. "United we stand; but divided: we get all sorts of mean things said about us," saith The Skirt. . i ? The most adorned -.woman is not always . the most adored w -. As a man 's salary gets higher, his wife's gowns get lower. A widow and. her weeds are soon parted. An old .fashion is old, but an an cient fashion is always modern. Walter Pulitzer, in March Delineator. Gone and Forgotten. Stub Some ' bright chap has figur ed out that if all the articles on the Thaw trial were heaped together they would make a mountain like Vesu vius. Penn Well, it is a pity they couldn't be turned into a volcano. Stub Why so1? Penn Then perhaps they would be reduced to ashes. "Dangerous Letters. "I hear that you had a great deal of trouble with your typewriter," said the banker. "What was the cause!" "The letters," replied the old broker. "But couldn't you get an expert to fix them?" "Oh, no. These were the letters she wrote to me when I was in the mountains and my wife found in my pockets. ' ' Best Disturber. Stubb Some genius has invented a phonograph that will run night and day without stopping. Would you pay much for music like that? Penn I should say so. Stubb Pay for the machine? . Penn No; pay a fine for licking the man who owned it if he lived within six blocks of my home. Seemed Like It. "Yes, indeed, we are very careful with little Archibald," said the strict parent. "We watch his associates, keep an eye on where he goes and don't let him read the newspapers unless we have clipped out everything he should not read." "Great Caesar!" exclaimed the as onished visitor, "what are you go ing to make out of him a New York juror?" Funny graphs. "According to this book," said Mrs. DeStyle, "seals sometimes shed ears just like men do." 'I don't see why they should," re joined her husband. "They don't have to pay for sealskin jackets." Such Innocence! Mrs. Stub Land's sake, John, there must be a great many barber shops in Wall street! Mr. Stub What causes you to think so, Maria $ Mrs. Stub Why, the papers say hundreds of men are trimmed there every day. Worth Knowing About. If you iveed a first-class laxative, there is nothing better nor safer- than that old family remedy, Brandreth's Pills. Each pill contains one grain of solid extract of sarsaparilla, which, with other valuable vegetable products, make ft a blood puri fier of excellent character. If you are troubled with constipation, one pill at night will afford great relief. Brandreth's Pills are the same fine lax ative tonic pill your grandparents used. They have been m use for over a century and are sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or sugar-coated. A blow threatened was nevr well given. Italian. Garfield Tea tist simplp, health-giving; Herbs! The' 'best 'tn'mJicine you can take. It regulates tho-. li-ver. and kidneys, over-! comes constipatiou aiiU purities tno LlooJ. How poor are they that have not patience! Shakespeare. There is no article of food mori appetizing, nutritious or healthful than Argo Red Salmon. As a brain and muscle builder it is far ahead of beef or other meats. No one ever repented of having held his tongue. Italian. Garfield ..'en. tl-e nil -.I larativo? "benefits the entire systm-i. Best. ir liver. Kidneys anil bowels: lor ecni'Siip'-itirr.i end Fic.:-licartucii. It is vain to learn wisdom and yet to live foolishly. Spanish. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Nervotrs Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Reason serves when pressed but hohest instinct comes a volunteer. Pope. The Alaska Packers Association give the heartiest support to the Pure Food laws, and guarantee their pro duct to meet all the requirements. Thetears of the night equal the smiles of the day. Rousseau. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. Paze Ointment is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. It is less to suffer punishment than to deserve it. Ovid. Watch for the transparencies of Argp Red Salmon in fOMr grbcer's window. No better Salmon packed at arly price Many a rat devors the lion. German. In 'Brief A .MINOR jfJATJIRS OF INTEREST The American Roadmakers, Asso ciation 'is in xjoriventibh'at Pittsburg. President Roosevelt issued an or der restoring to entry about 36,000, 000 acres of coal' lands that had been withdrawn . - : - The mother of R. D. Ramsay, trav eied from Nova Scotia ,tq Petersburg -to see her son, who was sick in a hospital; only , to find him dead. The stockholcrers' of the Pennsyl vania railroad approved the . proposed increase of $200,000,000 in, stocks and bonds. The Virginia Conference of the United Brethren Church is in session at Edinburg, Virginia. Dacisions in a number ot cases yere , nanaea aown mine unnea -P5JT'n of 20 hours durin the winter circuit Lourt ot Appeals at Kira- Lmond Governor Swanson has commuted the sentence of "Wes" Wilkie, a negro sentenced , to die for murder, to imprisonment for life. Mr. C. H. Hurkamp, of Fredericks burg, has been appointed one of -the judges of the Baltimore horse show, which will be held on the grounds of the Elkridge Hunt Club on May 23, 24 and 25. By the will of Edmund P. Dwight, of Philadelphia, various church or ganizations get 0200,000. The Guyan, Big Ugly and Coal River RiSlway Company has been formed to build a railroad in Lin coln county, West Virginia, from the mouth of Big Ugly creek to a point on Laurel fork. The capital is $100,000, and those interested are J. W. Johnson, Mary A. Sims, H. T. Lovett, Paul W. Scott and Mary E. May. The former Anne Gould's Paris lawyer charged her $175,000 to get a divorce. The shops of the Dry Fork Rail road Company, which were destroy ed by fire at Hedricks, W. Va., will be rebuilt at once. Mine No. 25, of the Davis Coal and Ooke Company at Thomas, W. Va., where 25 men were recently killec by an explosion of gas, was the scene of another accident, one Italian hav ing been killed and two injured by a fall of slate. Catell county, West Virginia, will vote on April 20 on the issuance of $240,000 worth of bonds for the maintenance and building of county roads and bridges. Israel J. Kinney, a retired , Balti more and Ohio passenger engineer, died at Grafton, W. Va., aged 67 years. He was a native of Doddridge county, W. Va., and served in the Union army. The deaths due to the blowing up of the French battleship Iena may number 120. Six persons were killed by an ex ploding bomb while searching a stu dent's apartment in Kharkov, Russia, Dr. Adam Jamieson and 12 others were killed in a wreck in the Trans vaal. President Bonilla, of Honduras is directing operations at the front from a fast automobile. The New York stock market was demoralixed, and a wave of liquida tion was attended by a shrinkage in values of upward of $300,000,000. European markets were similarly af fected. Clashes took place -between the Louisville police and the street car strikers. The trial of Abraham Ruef. was .cailei 'in-San Francisco, but was post poned untilMonday. H. G. iieD dwell, nresident of the Farmers' B'ank 'of Canton. Ohio, com mitted suicide. Floods due to heavy rains are caus ing havoc in Maryland, Pennsylvania and the Middle Western States. Governor Gillette, of California, sent, to the legislature, corespondence with President Roosevelt on the Jap anese question. t The Socialists in the Russian Douma ar.e preparing for a fight. President Roosevelt has not been informed as to what the four railroad presidents will propose at, their com ing conference with him, but he is said to be in a receptive mood. Commander Richard C. Hollyday, a native of Maryland, is to be appoint ed chief of the Bureau of Docks and Yards of the nevy department. A. B. Strickland, president of the Chicago and Northwestern railway, says Western companies will fight in the courts all state regulations, of railroads. M. Jean Paul Pierre Casimir-Per-ier, former president of France, died suddenly. It is believed that the railroad magnates are disposed to support Mr. Roosevelt's plan to centralize the control of the railroads in the federal government, as a protection from state legislation. Mrs. Russell Sage, widow of the New York financier, has set aside $10,000,000 for what is to be known as the Sage foundation, the income to be used in improving social and living conditions in the United States. MET A PECULIAR DEATH MotofmaEilled land Others Jlurt By ' Huge Icicle. Niagara Falls; N. Yr Special. A huge icicle dropped from the, cliffs f fh"e Niagara gorge -onto a - trolley car of the Gorge road as it was pass ing the" 'Whirlpool "rapidlrMoTtor man Everett 'Ramsdell jras killed. Dr. and Mrs. M. B. Nervy of Siox City, la., and Miss Nervy were struck on the back and badly raised and S. C. Lindsay, and wife of Pittsburg were injured,' the' former having-his hands-mashed. The injured were taken to the Prospect House. ' 18-Hour Train "too. Fast., ') .. Chicago, Special. More than 50 6f the most ' prominent 'persons in Chic ago who are patrons of the Twenti eth Century Limited and the Penn sylvania special trains running be tween New York and Chicago in 18 ours want these trains slowed to a monthSe A petition requestin petition requesting Pres ident Newman, of the New York Central lines, and President McCrea, of the Pennslyvania lines, to take such action is being industrously circulated in the clubs. None but known patrons of the trains are being sought as signers, and already be tween 50 and 100 names have been attached. Panama Men May Strike. Panama, By Cable. The canal steam-shovel men ask for a material increase of pay and withdrawal of the new rules concerning the accumula tion of vacation time. Their de mands being refused by Chief 'Engi neer Stevens, a committee of three left on the last boat to lay their de mands before the higher officials. Before leaving they were notified by cable that the President indorsed the action of Mr. Stevens. It is consid ered here that the shovel men have an exaggerated idea of their impor tance as a result of the frequent ref erence of Mr. Roosevelt ''while on the Isthmus to the men behind the steam shovel. Shipbuilders 'Start a Strike. Cleveland, Special. While the strike of shipbuilders at yards of the American Shipbuilding Company is thus far confined mainly to the Cleve land and Lorain (Ohio) plants, offi cials of the International Boilermak ers and Iron Shipbuilders' Organiza tion asserts that there will be acces sion to the ranks of the strikers dur ing the present week. They say the order for the strike, which was issued Saturday night, was not received at most of the yards till Tuesday, and that it will be followed by many of the union employes. Bulgarian Premier Killed. Sofia, Bulgaria, By Cable. M. Petkoff, the premier and minister of interior, was assasinated here. M. Petkoff, with other ministers, was walking in the Boris Garden when he was attacked by an unknown man, who fired at him with a "revolver. The premier was wounded by three bullets and died instantly. M. Gue madie'f, the minister- of commerce and agriculture, who was one of the ministers accompanying M. Petkoff, was wounded in the arm. Warns Standard Oil Men. Chicago, Special. In the Standard Oil. trial .considerable difficulty was experienced by the attorneys for the government in obtaining evidence from the employes. Judge Landis finally interfered' in the case of one witness, whose answers he considered unnecessarily brief, and said that he wanted no more such conduct. If the witness was able to answer the questions, he must do so, but if he did not know, he must say he did not know and avoid consuming the time of the court to no purpose. Bethlehem Company Loses. Washington, Special. In the case of the United States versus 'the Bethlehem Steel Company, involving a claim by the company for $21,000, withheld by the government as pen alty for delay in delivering six dis appearing gun carriages made by the company in 1898, the supreme court of the United States delivered a de cision favorable to the government. The opinion was by Justice Peck ham. The decision of the court of claims, favorable to the company, was reversed, and the ease remanded to that court. 22 Drowned in River. Redding, Cal., Special. Twenty four Greek laborers started to cross ,the Sacramento river in a boat at Pitt Tuesday afternoon. The boat capsized and 22 of the men were drowned. Four bodies have been re covered. The men were emoloyed by the New Delmar-Pitt Railroad. To Court-Martial Swift.. Washington, Special. Before leav ing Washington Wednesday for a cruise on the Dolphin, Secretary Met calf will order the court-martial of Cpat. William Swift, in accordance with the recommendation of the court of inquiry on the grounding of his ship, the Connecticut, in Target bay, Culebra, P. R ., on January 13. The court will probably sit at Guantana-mo. SUNDAY SCHOOL. - . . r-' 'INTERNATIONAL tXESSON COM K MENTS FjQR EJuTAtteH34 BYV THE REV. I. W. HENDERSON. Subject: Woes of Drunkenness, Isaiah . 28:7-13- Golden r Text, Hos. 4-11 Memory Verse, 7" ,. Commeiitarjr . ,w- ...W,.K It is not at all necessary to go to the Scrpiture to find matter applica ble to a lesson om the woes of drunk enness. All too sadly we. have but to look right; around,, us ja Order to firid examples, illustrations and texts for. a lesson upo this theme.' Isaiah draws fcisv a thrilling4, awful picture of the effects of. drunkenness upon the people of Jerusalem,-and especially .upon" their priests and prophets. He predicts that if they do. not cease from wantonness and the following ot drunken iniquity the Lord will punish them in the persons of the Assyrian hosts, men "with an other tongue." He clearly sets forth what are the effects of drunkenness on the minds of men, leading them to defy even God Himself, and, with out fear, to flout His chosen prophetic messengers. The picture that Isaiah paints for us, in words that blare and burn, is not more awful than the picture any prophet of God "might draw, if hje so desired, of the Conditions of modern life. To be sure -it would not be pos sible to say that the ministry, as a clas, are given to the vice of intemperance.- It would not be possible to say that those who, in any departure of life, believe themselves blessed of God with a prophetic message to men, are, as a class, under the dominion of that particular tein. The day long since has passed. when it was consid ered "the thing" for ministers to drink and no great disgrace for them, now and then, to become over-indulgent. The priest of God who drinks is not the rule hut the exception in this more enlightened age. But al though the cup has come into dis favor among the cloth, it is all too sad a fact that, in the world at large, it is altogether too popular, both for tie welfare of individuals and of so ciety as a whole. There seems to be an opinion abroad, in some very estimable quar ters, that when these lessons on in temperance are taught we should, as far as possible, avoid telling the youth of our Sabbath schools the plain, hard, appalling facts of the woes of intemperance. The woes of intemperance are only to be spoken of in the title head. They are to be forgotten as we proceed to the study of the lesson. Frankly the writer is not of that same mind. Nothing is to be gained by dodging the enormity of the sin of intemperance as, to-day, its lecherous hand stretches over our land with eager desire to grasp our young men and maidens, our old-men and matrons. Everything is to be lost by refusing to look the evil in the face and to paint it to the world in its proper colors. It cannot be passed by in silence if we are the fol lowers of Christ that we should be; its baneful effect up on thousands di rectly and upon the whole nation in directly cannot be gainsaid. Its grip must be broken, its influence must be nullified, it must be annihilated. The woes of drunkenness descend upon women as well as men; upon the innocent as well- as upon the guilty; upon society as upon the in dividual. The amount of drinking that is prevalent among women to day is almost past belief. And even as men cannot escape the effects of strong drink, so women do not. And awful as are the consequences of in temperance upon the lives of men, they are unspeakably more so upon the lives of women. For a moral and sober motherhood is the base upon which all society rests. And anything that destroys the purity and the beau ty of our .womanhood strikes at the very vitals of all human life. Its ef fect upon men is so widely spread and so generally recognized that we should be arrayed solidly as a Chris tian host against it. Wrecked busi ness enterprises, ruined reputations, forfeited positions of truth and re sponsibility and profit, blasted homes, disgraced lives, are the frequent con comitants of drunkenness among men. And the worst of it all is this, that the men and women guilty of the vice of intemperance do not always reap the most': distressing conse quences. Upon the innocent, the fathers and mothers, the wives and husbands and children, -all too often the direful consequences of the lndi-. vidual's sins are visited. Further, the State suffers immeasurably through the moral downfall of her members through drink. Society has an interest in every, member of its ranks. The weal of one Is the wel fare of all and conversely the woe of one has an evil influence upon the moral , health of the whole com munity. ' ' The woes of drunkenness. Half a century ago Harriet Beecher Stowe portrayed the woes of slavery, and her name is famous and the slave is free. Imperishable memory awaits the man who, with prevision, insight and precision, can depict to the world the horrors of intemperance unto the emancipation of a host now enmeshed in the tolls of this iniquity. 1 Vs. 7, 8. Picture of the drunken ness of the priests. Vs. 9, 10. The drunkards mock Isaiah. "Knowledge," prophetic teaching. "Tidings." "Revelations." "Weaned." "They protest they are not children." Vs. 11,-13. Isaiah retorts to them with their own words. "Stammer ings." A foreign tongue. "Anoth er." Assyrian. The paint of pride Is not the same as the robe of righteousness. Fire Destropes Entire Town. Richmond, Va., Special. The bus iness district of the mining town of Preacher, in Wise county, Va., was destroyed by fire Monday. Of 11 stores, only two are said to have been left. The total loss is believed to ex ceed $25,000, with only partial in surance. Green & Young, who con ducted one of the largest stores, sus tained a loss of about $3,000, "wjith insurance to the amount of $2,500. Stubb So the doctor cured ; your Wy children of the rnumpsf Didyoupajr Pl ;v hWiir installments! C -s . C" V ' Penn No, in a lump sum; : AppUcant--What; doesr a t marriage license cost! r - . . Clerk-eUreaUyil tell till you've feed?i-f twenty years.-Philadelphiquirer. , ...;v - , PARISIAN FANCIEST i&'x-i".! ' " Vt' A certainlv a' feeasotD of pretty IreW belonfijnjgs alid;SAmswnea - - f one must have pretty articles. or giVe up the affempt to he VeH gowned. . The ' French teach : us very nic ideas in this respect,"for; they, have a way of , ' rmrcjiaslnig little idditlons to the; warfrbe 'to be pr. served iand used year after year - For- Tone tMng every French woman nas xnis . season ; , a mjnaswuie iueuu ; w? w ; VIUW WU1VU, UOUga liyui uiyr niisk a metal chain. Metal hags come large tnd fiat, and lined with white kid. They are in gilt, silvet and gun metal, -and they are fastened; with a gold, clasp which is set with " a turquoise ' matrix or with some - other pretty stone of the semi-precious, variety. This little gold chain' hag is carried , all winter with all t kinds of .fur, and can be ised for one's small belong ings where one could not possibly carry one's purse. In the Game. V Once there was a man. who thought Uncle Russell Sage -ought to- stop, work. He spoke to him about it. "Why get together any more money, Mr. Sage? You can't eat It;- you can't drinkH it. . What good; will it do you?" - . . ' ' ; "Ever play marbles?" Uncle Russell asked. "Yes, when I was a boy. "Couldn't eat 'em, could youT couldn't drink 'em,; could you? No use to you, were they? What did you play marbles for?" Harper's Weekly. ' Some Fun. r"oor chap l everything he earns - j goes on his wife's back." )BJ tl "Well, if you'd seen her at the' r opera you wouldn't think he 1 earaedfjv much. 7 Bohemian. t(T n'ftftn i arctntifr. 7 1 TPTnnrTrPi - fK soulful young man, dreamily, "what's w the best way to find out what a wo- 1 man thinks of you. " ' ' Marry her,'' snappel Peckham-f Philadelphia Press. - "My, but old Russell is a storage i- ! battery of energy. Doesn't he just lis i.? fire one with enthusiasmf" -;; 4 's4--"f't! "Yep; Fused to work for. him' and t j? I never was fired any more. enthus-- j iastieally in my life by anyone.' r?' 1 Judge. ' - r. r ,U'.J ''She sings with so mucii ''feeligi Xi doesn't she?" . .. 'r ft::X:: ' ' Yes. She 's always tabbing - her. - , . h - - self around the heart or fussing with r ; her back hair." -Chicago r." Chicaeo fiecord-v : Herald "She married him tibrcform"hhnM. "Did she succeed?" ..'"i?A.-:;-,i'IliK..i "Sure I He used :tox be'Valspend Hl thrift, and now he has notlungto spend. ' ' Houston Post. rl -.vV Mrs. Watkins If you are unhappy f ; with your husband, why don't, you?; separate? . ?i I Mrs. Wylkyns Because his plano r: K . dividing assets isn't fair. He wants to take all the bonds and real restate and give me all the children. Sohi erville Journal. jr1 1 1 .-r. . . ALL PRETTY BAD. , 1-: Mrs. Knox. When they speak "of the lower branch of Congress, what... . UO Lilcjf lucau i 7 Knox. It's pretty j hard to Some of the people .in the. Senate; are low enough just Standard and Times. now. Catholic 'f As are the times, so are the inany ; ners. So. ll-'07. v- i TTTTO iTFWnT.l!'.. WAIVfTT.V Mother Finds a Food For Grown-UpS "fit and Children as WeU; ) - Food that can. be eaten with relisi. and benefit by the children as well a the older members of the family, makeB a pleasant household commoc UK K Such a food is Grape-Nuts. It'nr only agrees with and builds up Chi dren, but older persons who, fro bad habits of eaUh,Yhave becor dyspeptics. ' ' A Phila. lady, after being benefitc herself, persuaded her, husband to t-Grape-Nuts for stomach trouble, writes: '"' - '-ilC- "About eight years ago I had a r vere attack of congestion of stom: and bowels. From that time'onS I to bevery careful about-eating, nearly every kind' of food then knov to me seemed to cause painj.-" . 'Four years ago I commence It use Grape-Nuts. I grew stronger ar better, and from that time I t zlic have been without.it; ;have gain-1 health and strength and fern n heavier than I ever was. : ' J "My husband ..was,, also fin z 1 condition his stomach hc : --a weak that he could eat harii? cz thing with comfort;' I got h! to ' Grape-Nuts and he soon,!--stomach7 trouble had diap"pt arc 1. "My girl", and .hoy, 3 ane, 0 : old,-. do - not " -want anythjlri: el: breakfast butGrapeNuts"' healthy children cannqtl 1 Name given hy 'Postum,- Creek. Mich. Read.the lit ; 1 : "The Road to .vWeuvlUe; "There's a reason ' :. .; .-v ! - : . . .. .V '
The North State (Lexington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 20, 1907, edition 1
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