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6 OXFORD PUBLIC LEDGER. FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1910 The Farming of Mr. John Crakore. It was early September, and here aial there over the cotton' field the bols were opening their snowy fruit. John, Crakow sat on. his- perch tak ing Ms moon, rest wiiht his. pi.pe.wlh.en ih.is old .neighbor, Jiim Mulekiin, came "John I ihave conxe over to talk more about this improved farming TOre daiiag. We all. down at the tore have been, diseussin,' it, an we ibev come to the conclusion we till have got to go to make any thing. 'They say you made a bumper crai of oats and your corn, was something toiow how muoh fertilizer a.nd what eurt you put on the corn and the 0aiUdid not put any fertilizer on the t:at at all that is. no fertilizer out of a -sack. I had crimson cloven-. as von know, on that field las t waiter ui(i all wint.tr loru;. whenever I ecu At jural on the larnd wl.ih a manore spreader, 1 spread the manure made by my -horsescows and beeves and vhe.a"the clover was TKrivtlyaiature 1 turned the whole mil r and pre par- d th land I'e-r corn, l.neiij 1 cut. ii-e . T ' A. :ar:i. o.f at. the ground ana c.sieu -i ill ' ;uu blocks and disked the uir.a ia.e sowed oats in September, using the eats T.fO pounds of acid p:ics- pate Ivate. I made this year u:e-n.v " Imshels ot oats an acre. ten now 1) ?irg treated in the same way. tii.d as we have a beef club, as you Jtnow. I have still soune cattle iai the .stalls, ard now I am cleaning the ma jw.re cut and this afternoon will wtart to spread it between the cot ton. rows." "Manurim cotton when t:he boils sBV beginning to open?' said Jian. 4-Ve';i, I do not know that the ma nure willi do much for the cotton; ?ut it will spoil in a heap, and I am amg to sow crimson clover a xnoni chat ccttcn shortly, and while 3 tan ::ot use the manure spreader t.heiv, I know that if I scatter tfae marker between the cotton rows, it will do no harm to the cotton, JuJ will certain IV help me to ae1. a good a-Tc.li of clover. Then next winter he manure will go on the clover for i.h:' ccrn next spring. Ycu see my corn, this year, and every one says I will make at le3st 75 bushels an jvcre. and in a few ..mere years of ?.h;;s s.rt of fannins I hope to get ar, average cf 1 00 bushels an acre. The-r, after the oats ycu see I have a 51mkI d field of peas for hay. I 3nt 3t.)0 rounds of acid phosphate -a-.n .'." per. lies of muriate of pctasli an itr-re and from the looks cf the crop rlowr ai;r the peas are cut. and -will tarn it in spiling: for cotton a n .i ynplr 4i0 i oands an acre cf acid phc ihate oiVv on the cotitcn lard trotd- cast, and plrirt on tne level. har- row ana use find thy r"din t'ae weeder as usua., cultivatcr. and I am "V: Jit-re. and from Ct eloks f the crop, get almost there this season." "I brghi to see it." said Jim. "Me xmd my old mule: will make about out hird of a bale an acre this year.ancl i t'will take it all to settle up at ff.he soirte and pay for the fertilizer. .Aid yoii ain't buyan' any ready fnix- Hl fertil c-r !1?" No I h-tve long ago found out that I can get sli th? ammonia Ir.e?d, nnd more than I d fertilizer, by wouid buy in a mix growins: the peas Jiiid clover and fe , The re is nothing r,o make corn cs !'I12 the pea hay. like stable manure ??c:3.j?.v when you liave crims:n clovtr, to put H on! and turn u.nder. Ycu will see that my con 5s grePT. to tha ground, while I saw yours fired almost to the ears. That's; so," sarld Jim, "and I cant understand it, for I put some 2 S 2 im the furrow under that corn." "But ycu have not the stuff un ci it to hold the moisture. Your con 5s fired in tin? dry weather following the heavy earaly rains, and you hav d raying clover and manure making of sand and clay, while I have the lanmus that will hold moisture. Then, too. you laid by your corn with a tp to and cutting the roots, while I went through as shallow as my two lliors? cultivator would,runi,and simply Zi't a dust blanket on the level Iground. "But," said Jim, "I thought that t;r..e corn woulyl Maw down if the soil rwasen't hilled up to it." It has blown dow.n worse than1 mint s you see, for you weakened it hy -nt.ting the roots and made them Ter.der, while mine are left tough zilycve ti e grcund and held on hard vuh their uncut roots. yo-.i take the paper and f-tVii i v th p s e iteti j or 11. ;S V.":l; ?,I have learned thes :m proved 'mi.r.cds. 1 liays who S'ri-5 to "vlicle Sv h -"s w-ih; y :v want to 1: .-ep up ssior,. you mr.t v?J;: i arm 1-n-jr." n-.vt I axTt got ?:.: r I had vo rs -re than " r: r- man in tnese FltK'y . r- ('.( up ; veilh lit S i ' i ' ro l-.ro-Tho if in r.n "CU jin-;-'. c; v;-f.,-: I dr.d-' r nd it on.V tak?-5 to do better. reined to do belt; r, ar ?r;t: n s a r. I r r eig y Yoa can better affart" for 2 S '2 fertilizer r go in belit rrow cotton stn-tl only com- enough, to feed a mule. JVavd I have seen that solemn old rnnle of your 3 vealking along the roves looking a-s though he wa s wondering if mere was going to be earn evu ngh. nrd to kecp .him alive nxt "winter. If yen must go lit debt o-r in for tilings that are going to get: you ou tof the hands of the merchant siTid fertilizer man. You are working Siarder than iveces493.:ry if you ouly Ivtiew how to make yoiir work pay e tter. I have money because I plann til to hav- some coming in at all sseasons instead of depending on one crop of col.tc.Ti for all the money I meed. So long as ycu do that you -will have the same old thing to do every spring go in debt for similes smd then at the end take everyth ing you hive made to square up, and jo through the same process the nex, that hias kept you poor and made your land peer, and so long as you Iceep spending yenr money for a littl 1200 pounds an acre of a fertilizer tha 5.s one-fourth sand, and grow no for xige amd fed no stock, make no ma nure and look to the cotton crop to pay for -everything else, you will Ikeep p-c-c.r and your land will remain loor. There is more in the man. than the land. Get a move on you. The land is all light, if the man does Ms duty by it, and the land wail continue to make poor crops so long as the man fails to do his duty by it. The greatest corn belt is right uere in the South, andj many.farm.ers are Maiding it out, while nien like you are every year buying the fros ted, rotton Western cor,n. Get a move on, you and stop talking aabout the miseries of a one-mule farmer Get some sand In your onavv." In my home garden, I ain,doing,neai ly all liy cultivation now wtith. a, rake every rain; and no matter how dry it gets .1 can kick really moist soil under the dust blanket wttt'h the toe t my shoe at any time. And how things do grow since the weatilier .has tunn ed warmer, My earlv corn is over knee high and I am hop.ing' for! roast ing ears before the end of June. Peas of co'urse. we hive had since the first week in. May, and have late ones coming in. I have ofttsn said tha the earlier we get tomatoe plants out and have them live, the earliet the j- w;i! be. I set cut my l.rst ones early in April. Tlu-v have passed thr ough two tests by being covered with earth. Since then. I have set oat fraan the frame other plants of the san:e a la.rge now and fraiti-ng. These, too have had the same rake call ivation. and the mc.stuiv nas tied; reta.n?!. ar.d all the we Ms in reach of germi nation have bt-er. kii! : d and I will bring no more up to sprout. In fact 1 are rat ih r. proud. of. the gar den. tor hear pec pie say; Go out to Prozessor Masssy's gardem; there -is nothing iL-ke it here." And tjiey come, and 1 sell them plar-ts that they could easly had themselves with a lit ttle glaio and seme love far the work. I have ordered a large lot of the new Sunlight double-glazed sashes foi the fall i.ud will keep this garden growing someilh ifg to eat and sell all next winter if health and st re ti tivatcr cf tli garden gth rem a? n with me. cultivation of the gard goal for Mie rem i'ie:.'! field, or the corn field, nuts wiill get the sam that other things get. ;s just as The sli allow ; just as the peanut and my pea- rake work ihs Statesman. Fv often heard "Oh. voters. L.n e statt smnn rs. watch me bleed and die, to she lid and guard your sacred rights: I'll labor 1'or you da and nights: I do not care lor weaKh or fame; to save the people is m: aim: for them I'd meet a hundred deems and occupy a hundred aeaibs: I love the people, old and young, f ci thern I'd sacrifice a lung." The peo ple are such easy marks that they believe these statesmen sharks. But I. grown old and worldly wise, avoid the man who bleeds and dies, who works the ''people" graft too hard; no sacred rights of mine he'll guird. I've noticed that the selfish man adopts the 'sacrificing' plan; V ne s always on the trail of snaps: he'd be a Congressman, perhaps; or, fail ing that, he'd gladly rob the county sheriff of his j'ob; and fi he loses on that line, as constable he'l surely shine. Xo matter what the j"ob lie seeks, for liberty he loudly shrieks, and has "Oppression" flogged and racked, and does the bleeding-dying act; through heated days and sleep less nights he wails about the people's rights. Oh, I would give two beans to find, a statesman of a candid mind, who to the people brave ly cries: I want the votes of all you guys; to Washington I fain would go, because, my friends, I need the dough." Walt Mason. (Copyright 1910, by George Matthew Adams.) HOW IS THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that ca: not be cured bv Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHEXY and Co.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and finan dally able to carry out any obliga tions made by his firm. WALBIXG. KIXNAN, MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous! surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Drug- Take Hall's Family Pill3 for con stipation. mm t m We!!, We!!, We!!, We!!. Of all the Wells in this world of Weil's. Montgomery's Wells dees wor that tells. If you want sanitary plumbing that will stand amy and all tests. Call for Montactenery's nlum- oe,: rells. Smoke Manila Stogies, fine. 2 for 7 cents. Ivor.s i ney are Drug Store. Clergyman's Son's Testimo nial cf Tuberculosis Cure To rcgloct a cold, bronchitis, lung trouble or Consumption is dangerous. We all know how prone people are to deny they have Consumption. It is a nattering disease, and the suf ferer is filled with bright hopes of improvement. Call Consumption by its own dread name and then take Eckman's Alterative, because it is effective in Tuberculosis. No one need doubt about it there is plenty of evidence from live witnesses. In vestigate the following: Amenia. N. Y., July 9, 1909. Gentlemen: Prior to Feb., 1908, I was located in Rochester, N. Y., suf fering with LaGrippe, which devel oped into Tuberculosis. My physi cian gave me one month to live. I was having terrible night sweats and mid-day chills and losing flesh rapid ly, having gone from 155 to 135 lbs. I coughed and raised continually and became so weak that walking a few feet exhausted me. On my return home, my regular physician gave me little encouragement. My father, who is a clergyman, heard of Eckman's Alterative and induced me to take it. The night sweats and chills disap peared, my cough became easier and gradually diminished and in a few ayS I developed an appetite, the first in months. I am now in perfect health, back to 155 lbs. I feel cer tain that I owe my life to Eckman's Alterative. Signed! E. H. COWLES. mani?T Alterative is good for J-liroat and Lung Trouble and is on sale J. G. HALL and other druggists. Ask for booklet of cured cases, or write to Eckman Mfg. Co. Phila., Pa. . 'Home Again!" of 1 en V S'o j WHEN THE KAISERIX ADGUSTE VICTORIA PASSES THE STATUE OF LIBEUTY. Copyiight, 1010, by American Press Asso ciation.! HEN Colonel Theo dore Roosevelt, fau nal naturalist, col lege lecturer a u d Grst citizen, steams up New York bay on June IS he will be met by a recep tion committee of all the noises that ever have been and some others tha: are manufactured for the occasion. A faint suggestion of these acoustic disturbances would look something as follows: Crack! Room! Toot-toot! Hurray! Has anybody here seen Teddy? Three clmers! (Followed by three cheers and several more.) What's the mat- ! ter with Oh. you Teddy! Siss boom! T-o-o-o-o-t! Whoop! Wow! Roosevelt forever! He's coming! Y-e-e-e-h-o-o-o! Ring! Bang! Tump-e-tump-tump! Ow-ow-ow! Hurray for Teddy! Hoop-la! Hail to the chief: My country, tis Toot! Boom! Crash! Raise this to the nth power, then prolong it indefinitely, and you will have the beginning of a hint of whai will happen on this noisiest of days. It will be a wonder. Everybody will be in New York that day either in person or by proxy. And everybody that is at all vociferous will be mak ing some kind of sounds. Most of these sounds will be loud at least as loud as their authors can contrive The din thereof will have New Year's night and the Fourth of July rolled into one and then have enough noise left over to supply a large aud busj collection of boiler factories. Twenty Thousand In Line. The official program of the Rooseveb reception in New York catalogues tin event somewhat as follows: The en tire reception committee, headed b Chairman Yanderbilt, will steam dowi; the bay to meet the Auguste Victoria on Saturday morning, June IS. I: will take the colonel aboard and re turn to the Battery with all the crafi following that can possibly get in line "THE WORLD IS MINE!" Embarking nt the Battery, Colonel Roosevelt "Will be officially welcomed by Mayor Gaynor. Then a land parade will take the place of the one on wa ter, and the former president, former African hunter, former grand adviser and former and present big noise of three continents will ride up Broad way, preceded by the mounted police, mounted band and escort of rough riders and followed by everybody in the United States tliat has been able mmmmmm & tiKoggyoc-C' The Ketern Roosevelt Plans For the Reception In New York His Western Tour -Will He Run For the Presiden cy Again ? By JAMBS A. EDGERTON. tiri Si.-- --:"tJ,.,.v-i to get a place in the procession. It is estimated that there will be 20.000 men in line. Among these will be the Spanish war veterans, Syrians in fe-zzes, Mayor Jim Dahlman of Omaha with cowboys, Hungarians in national costume and every other nationality that goes to make up the composite product known as the American peo pie. It seems good, doesn't it? Just like the old days! After a dreary year of Payne-Aldrich tariff. Uncle Joe, the in- COEXEI.IUS VANDERBILT, CHAIRMAN OF ROOSEVELT RECEPTION COMMITTEE. surgents. Ballinger-Pincliot, Cook-Peary and forty-seven different kinds of in vestigations the sound of the voice that has been smothered so long in the Af rican jungles will bring back a feeling of mother and home. Already there is a dental gleam across the Atlantic, and a fresh snap and vivacity are in the air. Teddy is coming home! Get the old bass drum down from the attic, pull the bunting from the closet under the stairway and take out your vocal apparatus and dust it off. The Teddy bear Is once more in fashion, the big stick Is wav ing in the breeze, and the spear that knows no brother is glistening in the sun. The trust busters' march need no longer be played with the soft pedal. Throw back the lid, stand on the loud one and come down on all the keys at once. Bang! There that's better! What a relief it is to do it in the good old way! Wall Street Hot Celebrating What about the pessimists who pre dicted that the colonel was certain to get African fever or the sleeping sick ness and those other Wall street proph ets who hoped that every lion would do its dntj'" They are all talking small now. Did they imagine that any thing in Africa could withstand the Roosevelt luck? What good are Wall street prophets anyway? Most of them cannot even predict the future movements of stocks and so have to depend on a sure thing game of word ing the lambs for commissions. "A prophet is not without honor save in his own country" was not spoken the Wall steeet brand of soothsayer. He is without honor anywhere under the sun. Wall street is not celebrating the re turn of the colonel. That is one rea" son why the rest of the country is celebrating. Possibly the bulls and bears fear that Roosevelt is coming back to start another hunt in the finan cial jungle. On the way to Khartum he dropped one significant remark fo the effect that he had harder won ahead than that done in Africa. Jusi what is that harder wor!; to be? Not writing e'idently. for he finished his African book before his return to civ ilization. Possibly the big trust game has reason for being apprehensive. High financiers are timid about every thing except taking other people's money, and the mere shine of the- Koeveit eyeglasses ana teeth gives them the shivers. What will he do after his return? That is a question the answer of which L fraught with some moment to this country. Certain gentlemen of the press and of the conservation move ment, popularly known as the "return from Elba" crowd, believe he will be a candidate for president in 1912. Certain other gentlemen of the press and of official station, known of all men as friends of the administration, are just as certain that he will get be hind Taft. A man of the name of Herron George D. Herron expatriat ed as I recall because of certain mat rimonial complications, thinks Roose velt will become not only president, but virtual emperor, that he will end the republic and that he will be the begin ning of "the new dark ages." Thus the thing is seen to be not without an element of the fantastic, especially when dealt with by a fantastic mind. It is perhaps as well to keep ourselves within the bounds of sanity when deal ing with Roosevelt or with other things. Will Go to Cheyenne. As to whether he will or will not lie come a presidential candidate he alone can answer. Of only two things are we sure that he will have the great est reception ever given an American citizen on his homecoming and that he will go to Cheyenne in August and presumably will greet certain bevies and swarms of delighted citizens on the way and back. This much will come of the suggestion of a western editor that the colonel return by way of San Francisco and tear up the vocal apparatus of the country on his way east. That he could not do because it would bring him home too late for his son's wedding. But he yielded to the suggestion to the extent of taking a later round trip to Cheyenne. Be yond these meager details it is given out that he will lecture, write books and help to edit the Outlook. Yhat else the future holds for him and for us the American people and Theodore Roosevelt himself alone can tell. f- Certain it is that he will have plenty ; to do after he informs himself of what! has taken place during his fifteen' months' absence, and whatever he does it will keep the country on the jump. It is impossible that his per ennial energies should be bottled. They will find an outlet, and a political outlet at that. Of iate the advice have linked his name with an ambi tious tour of twenty-four states, with an address at one big mass meeting in each. This tour is to be made in con nection with the Cheyenne trip, and the fortunate commonwealths included are as follows: New York. Ohio. Indiana. Illinois. Wisconsin, Minnesota, South Dakota. Nebraska. Wyoming. Colorado, Kan sas, Oklahoma. Texas, Louisiana, Ala bama, Georgia, Tennessee. South Car olina, North Carolina, Yirginia. Penn sylvania. Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey. Walter Wellman, who has been with him on the European tour, intimates that if the country demands it Roose velt will again run for president. By the way, Wellman in one of his letters has a touch that is too good to be lost. It recounts how a young Englishman came down to the wharf in Egypt to see the former president. He gazed long and earnestly at that picture of health. Then he turned and said: And just to think that man is now re turning from a year on the equator! They tell me he has been out day after day eight, ten, twelve hours in the scorch ing sun. He has waded marshes up to his neck. He has fought his way through papyrus and reeds and ooze and mud. He has never had a day of fever or met a touch of dysentery. Look at him and look at me, as I have been down here 70'J miles from the equator only one year. I have tried to take care of myself. I have been in no swamps, done no hunt ing, save of mosquitoes. I am a wrecit have had fever, have had dysentery, have taken barrels of medicine, have been in hospitals and am now going home. 1 am r ,sr EECEjVT SNAPSHOT OF COLOXEI. ROOSE VELT. a shadow of my former self. That is the way with most of those who come down into this country, which is no place for a white man. We go bad. We waste away. But look at this Mr. Roosevelt. Isn't he a wonder? Here at home we who have known him all his life and who are of all shades of political opinion concerning him must echo that sentiment isn't he a wonder? . MHSfflafeA if? & Free Sample For Baby's ills Something can and must be done for the puny, crying baby, for the child that refuses to eat and is rest less in its sleep. And since the basis of all health is the proper working of the digestive organs, look first to he condition of the stomach and bowels. A child should have two full and fre movements of the bowels a day This emptying of the bowels is very important, as with it comes a clear head, a light ness of step, good appetite and soun.I S-nSL' JlU is,elually important to know what to give the child in tha emergency of constipation and indiges tion. Cathartics are too strong and salts and other purgatives are not only too strong, but the child refuses them be cause of their bad taste. Hav you ever tried Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin? It Is a liquid tonic that families have been using for a quarter of a century It is mild, pleasant-tasting and promptly ef- itlV2,--i H. 5ood -for V,J as well as tne child, but there is no''-;g foQttor a be 'found for children. They like its taste you will not have to forca them to rv First of all, if you have not yet U3ed it, Dr. Caldwell would like to srd vou a sample bottle free cf charare. In this way you can try it before fouv'ip. L,at when convinced of its merits" "you carl E?t it of your druggist at fiftv rpts and ope do.Iar a bottle, just as thousands of other famines are doin.ar. The farailv of Mr. D. W. Spang! er of StrattonviPe Pa as well as that of Mr, A. F. Johnson of Walnut Grove. Tenn.. started with it in that way and now write that it is their one family necessity next to food itself If you are unfortunate enough to have a sickly child, one given to constipation and indigestion, you should send for a free sample of this remedy -Dr. Caldwell personally will be pleased to give you any medical advice yo'i may desire for yourself or family pertaining to the stomach, liver or bowels absolutely free of charge. Explain your case in a ietter and he wiY! reply to you in detail. For the free sample simply send vour name and address on a postal card or otherwise. For either request the doco'3 ad lress is Dr. W. B. Caldwell, R.oO'j Cald well building, Monticelio, 111. For Sale by CRENWILLO DRUG CO. JUDICIAL CONVENTION FOR THE NINTH DISTRJCT. By order of the ittee at a meetimg Excutive Co:rn held in Greens boro, North Carolina, June the l",th. 1910, the Democratic Judicial conven tion for the ninth Judicial District is hereby called to meet in Greenshor North Carolina .July 4t.li. 1010 ?.t S, So o'clock P. M. for the purpose of nominating a candidate for solicitor for said district and for transacting such other business as may pre per Ly come before the convention. In the conveiiitlc-n each County in the district is entitled to one dele gate and one alternate for every twei ty-fiveDemccratlc votes and cue de- legate one alternate for fractions of ceding Gubernatorial eiecticn said delegates and alternates to be elective by the respective County Convention, in each Countv. JOHN N. WILSON Chairman. FRANK NASH. Secretary. Drink Jersey Creine the perfect drink at Lyons Neve Iceless Innova tion Soda Fountain. "If it is a Mower, or Rake you want, then Davis i the man you want to get in touch with, for he handles the International line, and it is the BEST in the Reaper or Mower. Write at once to SAMUEL DAVIS, Clarksville, Ya., for prices, and catalogue." Dr. WM. BARKER'S EXPERI- ENCE IN LONDON. (From the Rochester Times.) Half a century ago there was no ci ty in tne world where an eminent were presented to one in London; realizing this fact, Di Barker, after graduating from Heidleburg, located in Londciu. His practice gTew so rap idly that at the end of five ' years he established the largest practice of any physlcain in that city. His practice was confined to chronic cas es only in the treatment of rheuma tism, catarrh, kidney and bladder dis eases. He used one never-failing pre scription t'hes same prescription he had written thousands of times; and he had seen patients come into his office on crutches, who said they had been troubled with rheumathn "for 15 and twenty years, and after using this special prsecrLption for two or three days, they would come walking to his office, as nimbly- as a school hoy, and thank him for the good he had done them. The L'octor said in, an interview that one man about 4T years old came to him cue dr.y and said he had been injured while, work ing at the carpenter trade al'out - years before, and had suffered, con-stantlj- since with kidney trouble. He had tried everything to get relief, bul nothing seemed to do him any acod. He asked the doctor if he knew anything that would cure him , and he tokl him of a never-failing remedy for all chronic ca?es like his. He wrote him a prescription and him to take it for a week ard told then was come and let hi in know how he getting along. The man came back to his office in just four daays and said he had not felt as well in his life. He also stated that his daugh ter, whom he had taken out of school because her eyes were too weak to study, and she could hardly se from one of them at all; she had been treated by four eye specialists with out relief and after ho had takr. thiis prescription for two days he saw it was helping him so much he let her take some of it, and to theiir great surprise, she improved wonderfully almost from the first dose. He told him that it was on ly a week's time after ?he commeA ced to take the medciine until she could see as well as ever and was a ble to return to school. It was not until after hundreds of such remarkable cases had been treated by Dr. Barker with this same prescription that he was prevailed upon in the interest of humanity to allow the wonderful prescription to be put up so that every sufferer coul have it at a very small cost. The public can now secure this prescrip tion under the name of hloodine, at drug stores or the Blooding Labora tories, Boston. Mass., will supply a six weeks' treatment (six bottles) for $2.50; 50 cents a bottle, trial bottle and bookie, 10 cents. For sale by Hamilton Drug Company.
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
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July 1, 1910, edition 1
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