Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / Nov. 3, 1911, edition 1 / Page 7
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OXFORD PUBLIC LEDGER, FRIDAY NOVEMBER 7, lOll. THEIR LAST HANDCLASP. The Final Meeting of Charles A. Dana and Jacob Riis. I like to think of my last meeting with Charles A. Dana, the "old chief," us lie way always called In the office. In all tho years 1 was on the Sun I !; not think I had spoken with him a halT dozen times. When he wanted anything of me personally his orders were very brief and to the point It was generally something a report to be digested or the story of some social experiment which showed me that In his heart he was faithful to his early love. He had been in his youth, as everybody knows, an enthusiastic re former, a member of the Brook Farm community. But if he thought I saw he let no sign escape him. He hated shams. Perhaps I was on trial all the time. If so I believe that he meant to tell me in that last handshake that he had not found me wanting. It was on the stairs in the Sun office that we met. I was going up; he was com ing down going home to die. He knew it. In me thore was no suspicion of the truth when I came upon him at the turn of the stairs, stumbling along in a way very unlike the usual springy step of the old chief. I hardly know him when he passed, but as he turned and held out his hand I saw that it was Mr. Dana, looking some how older then I had ever seen him and changed. I took off my hat, and we shook hands. "Well," he said, "have you reformed everything to suit you. straightened out every kink in town?" "Pretty nearly," I said, falling into his tone of banter, "all except the Sun office. That is left yet and as bad as ever." "HaT he laughed. "You come on. We are ready for you. Come right along!" And with another hearty handshake he was gone. He never saw the Sun office again. It was the only time he had ever held out his hand to ' me after that first meeting of ours when I was a lonely lad, nearly thirty years before. That time there was a dollar id it, and I spurned it. This time I like to be lieve his heart was in it. And I took it gladly and gratefully. Jacob A. Riis, "The Making of an American." THE LAND OF CHEESE. Switzerland Has the Proud Honor of Deserving This Title. Cheese, although an important prod uct of our dairy farms and a reason ably popular article of diet in the Unit ed States, has never held quite the po sition with us given it in some Euro pean countries. English and Germans are far greater consumers of cheese than we, while both are surpassed by Norwegians. But above all Switzerland is the land of cheese. On more than one occasion travelers have dwelt upon the func tions, social and sentimental as well as astronomical, performed by the cheese of Zermatt that remarkable cheese which is so hard that it has to be scraped with a knife or cleft with an ax. It is said by one authority that the patrician rank of a Swiss family in that part of the confederation is esti mated by the age of its cheese, and the greater the respect due to or the affection for a guest the older is the cheese set before him. There are said to be families who own cheese that dates back to the time of the first French revolution, which is served only on solemn occasions, such as christenings, weddings or funerals. There are in each pantry at least as many cheeses as there are toys and girls in the family, for at the birth of every child a cheese Is made, which is named after the newcomer and is first cut into on his or her wedding day, on which festive occasion all guests par take of a piece of the groom's and the bride's cheeses in order to secure for them all earthly thrift and happiness. The rest is served as a token of friend ly souvenir and heartfelt mourning after the tomb has closed over his or her mundane career. New York Trib une. New Mexico's Early Name. What a pity the name "New Mexico" cannot be changed to "Cibola!" (Ala bama, Arizona, Arkansas, California Cibola! How well these would sound in the already musical roll call of the states!) Such was the primeval name, and the country was known as the "Land of the Seven Golden Cities of Cibola" after Vaca brought the first reports of its marvels into Mexico. The sensitive imaginations of the Span iards, whetted by the tales told by .Vaca and inspired to new flights by an occasional Indian's romancing, pic tured seven noble cities, each as large and as beautiful as the City of Mexico. Fancy painted mirages wherein were gold and silver and rare gems without limit D. H. MacAdam in Metropoli tan Magazine. Enlightening th Minister. "We are going to have pie for din ner," said Bobby to the minister. "Indeed!" laughed the clergyman, amused at the little boy's artlessness. "And what kind of pie, Bobby?" "It's a new kind. Ma was talking thi3 morning about pa bringing you to dinner so often, and pa said he didn't care what she thought, and ma said she'd make him eat humble pie before the day was over, and I suppose we're oing to have it for dinner." In the Future. Magistrate What! Drunk again? When you were here Inst time you promised to sign the pledge. Prisoner Well. I'm goi-r to. yer honor, jest as soon as I learn to write. I've beer takin lessons, but I hiven't made touch progress yet. Toledo Blade. A Famous Kitchen. "It was our good fortune to see at least . one thing in Paris which the tourist knows nothing about," writes an American woman from that city. "Every one knows about the Tuileries and sees wbat is left of the historic pile, but not many find their way to the kitchen from which the elect of the third empire were served, as we did. It lies under the Pavilion de Flora, its high arched ceiling resting on massive colums. It is divided into miwiy sections, at the entrance to each of which there is a sign gold od marble. Here we see 'Rotisserie.' 'Patisserie. 'Section aux Sauces,' etc. The provisions for washing gold, sil ver and porcelain services, the tre a:endous roasting, boiling and broiling arrangements, the extra roast beef oven, six meters high and seven meters broad; a roaster with a capacity for six sheep and four dozen chickens all looked extra large and imposing to us. who manage to worry along in a flat kitchen, which has two things, how ever, which we could not find in Na poleon's dinner factory electric light and a battery of washtubs," Her Sound Advico. The prominent citizen and favorite son sat at his desk, deeply immersed In the cares of his wide affairs. A delegation of party leaders was ushered In. "Sir," said the spokesman, "you have been unanimously chosen as the party's candidate for governor of the state. Under present conditions a nomination Is tantamount to election, and we urge your acceptance. The office seeks the man." "Gentlemen," said the favorite son. "I am profoundly Impressed by the honor done me. but before I accept 1 must consult my wife. I never take a decisive step without consulting my wife." Tho committee bowed and withdrew. At home the favorite son confided the circumstances to his wife, who lis tened with fond pride and wifely ad miration. "And now," he said In conclusion, "what would you advise me to do?" "John." she said, "you must get your hair trimmed." Savannah News. Uncle Sam's Eagle. The 'eagle is the king of birds, the lord of the sky, the bravest, noblest and most independent of the feathered tribe, and probably that Is the reason why he we adopted as our national bird. His 'mage holds its place upon our nations coat of arms by sheer merit and not merely from empty sentiment. The noble bird, loving liberty, scorning confinement, at home and at his best only when invested with the wide freedom of the glorious heavens, is the fit emblem of the "spirit of '76" and of the government that that spirit won and established on the earth. Other peoples entertain the same high opinion of the eagle, since from the time of the Institution of the Roman standard straight down to the present day be bas appeared as a conspicuous figure in the heraldry of the nations. New York American. Too Pretty a Lake For That. "China gave me many a shock." said the returned traveler, "but the one that nearly carried me off was administered in the Fuchau district. Out in the country I came across a beautiful little lake drained by a beautiful little river. The scenery was marred somewhat, however, by signs stuck up every few yards at the edge of the lake. I won dered what their import was, and on one of my trips to the lake I took a missionary friend along to translate. 44 'Oh, that,' said he. 'There are not many of them left in this district. That is a warning that girls must not be drowned in this lake.' "Somehow I could never admire my beautiful lake so much after that, al though maybe I ought to have admired it more." New York Press. Ponies and Horses. I have been asked a great many times If ponies are really more intel ligent than full sized horses. They certainly appear to be. But the in telligence of any horse will develop under petting and human compan ionship, and there is no doubt that other horses, if given the same privi leges that ponies enjoy and if their size admitted of their being bandied and managed in the same way, would prove equally intelligent. Outing. Sheer Waste. Wife John, is there any poison in the house? Husband Yes. But why do you ask? Wife I want to sprinkle some on this piece of angel cake and put it where the mice will get it. Wouldn't that kill them? Husband Sure, but it isn't necessary to waste the poison. Stretches Politeness. The Duchess of Blankshire (who has made a poor drive) A little too much to the right. I'm afraid. Obsequious Professor who is instructing the Duch ess) Oh, not at all. your grace; the hole has been cut too much to the left. Golf Illustrated. Variety. Blodds I never knew a woman sc changeable as Mrs. Dashaway. Slobbs I know It. She never even wears the same complexion twice." Philadelphia Record. One Way. Wigwag 1 never knew such a fel tow as Bjones! He is always looking tor trouble. Henpecke Then why doesn't he get married? There's nothing half so good as laughing.. Never sigh when you can sing. Mackwarth Praed, BROUGHT HIS TOOTHBRUSH. But Saint-Saens, the Composer, Didn't Shock Parisian Society. The Cri de Paris told the following story of Saint-Saens, the composer: A rare visitor to Paris, he is on his visits much sought after as a social lion. One lady succeeded in persuading him to ac cept an invitation to dinner, promising to send to fetch him and also to deposit him at his door when he left, his only stipulation being that he should be al lowed to make his adieus at 10 o'clock. The son of his hostess was dispatch ed in good time and found M. Saint Saens in a velvet coat seated before his piano. He rose at once, however, and asked for ten minutes to dress, at the end of which he appeared, tying his white cravat. As he was shutting his door behind him he ejaculated: "Good gracious! One minute morel I have forgotten my toothbrush!" The young man, to his amazement, saw his guest dive into his dressing room and reappear with a toothbrush, which he put away in his breast pock et. On arriving home he told his moth er, who in some uneasiness informed her friends, and everybody was in wonderment as to what the great com poser was going to do with his tooth brush. Every eye was fixed on him through out the dinner, watching him as he ate and drank and used his finger glass. In the drawing room Saint-Saens talk ed with the ladies and played any piece that was asked of him till 10 o'clock struck, when he bade farewell politely to the company. The journey home was without inci dent, and when they reached his house M. Saint-Saens simply offered to shake hands and say good night. Curiosity was too strong, though, for the youth, who said: "Excuse me. tnaiter, but I should so much like to know why you so par ticularly wanted to take your tooth brush with you." "Oh. my yumg friend." replied Saint Saens, "it is very simple! My lock is very stiff, and 1 always hurt my fingers in turning the key. So I now pass the handle of my toothbrush In the ring of the key and turn it easily. Voila!" THOROUGHLY WARMED. An Old Time Schoolboy's Experience on a Bitterly Cold Day. An old time gentleman of Newbury port, describing his sthiml days to the opening years of the nineteenth cen tury, bas this to say of a wintry day: "We found our inkstands all frozen up. These required to be thawed out. To do this there was a board held up by bricks over the stove on which the pewter inkstands were placed, but be fore the copy was written down the ink would be again frozen. Then the boy took bis ink to the stove again and while it was thawing laid in a store of caloric for himself, standing by the stove, watching closely that the pewter should not melt. "The clothes of the boys were made of corduroy, jacket and trousers in one. and nothing under but a shirt. These absorbed the heat like sheet iron, so that when a boy retruned to his seat he was often compelled to carry his ink stand in his mouth, employing both hands to hold his trousers off from his knees, and with every precaution the skin was often mottled and scorched." Another old time schoolboy in his later years recalled an even severer ex perience. "I can remember," he recorded, "how. crowding close to the stove to toast the shivers from my poor little body, I scorched a hole in my trousers in front and exclaimed aloud at the dis; aster, whereupon the master thrash ed a hole into them behind, and when I went home to my mother she told me grimly it was well that things should match and that as my shirt was such an old one she was willing to risk fraying it on the back, and she reached for a strap and did! "1 was thoroughly warmed, and it was the coldest day of the year, but 1 regretted my shivers after all." Youth's Companion. Helpful Son-in-law. "So you asked my wife for our daughter's hand, did youV" said the stern father. "I did. and she began to give me a piece of her mind about my persump tion. and I" "And you beat a retreat and came to see me. Well, sir" "Oh. no! I didn't retreat. I argued it out with her, and before I left she had given me her consent. So F "You did? Bully for you! You can have the girl, and you can live right here with us. I want to study your system of defying my wife for a year or so anyway." Woman's World. Little Pitcher. Lady Visitor 1 am- coming to your mamma's company tomorrow. Tommy. Tommy Well. you. won't get a good supper. Tommy's Papa Tommy, what do you mean, talking like that? Tom myWell, you know, pa, you told ma you'd have to get some chicken feed for her old hen party tomorrow. Bal timore American. The Widow. "I noticed as I came in," said the caller to her dear friend the widow, "that you have made a change in your servants. You have a white butler now." "Yes." sighed the widow, "a white butler, but a negro cook. I go into half mourning this season." Harper's. Inherited It. - "What a matchmaker that woman Is, to be sure!" "Yes. but she comes by it honestly. I . understand her father was a pro moter." Detroit Free Press. The Conscience of Clara. One day vnn Mrs. Bell was mak ing a neighborly call on Mrs. Ellis the latter, m the presence of ner caller, discharged her colored maid, whose obstreperousness could he borne with no longer. A few weeks later Mrs. Bell again called on Mrs. Ellis, and to her sur prise her hostess informed her that Clara was hack. The services of the maid were re quired by her mistress, who pressed "the button in the drawing room. There was. uowever, no response. Finally Mrs. Ellis went out and waited on herself. While she was gone Clara, who was acquainted with Mrs. Bell, having served in her fam ily also, put her head in at the door and explained; "Mis Bell. I heard Mis' Ellis all the time, but do you recollec' the las' time you was here she discharged me an said she'd never have me again? i said I'd uever come back too. But here 1 am. so we bofe lied. That!s why l's ashamed to come in. 1 was ashamed for bofe of us." New Yorf Times. Chili Con Came. From remotest Mexico comes this recipe for chili con carne. which is capable of warming whatever cockles the heart may have and of diffusing calories to one's works, at large: First comes a fire 'f logs in the open. Second comes an olla of generous proportions. Into the olla put a gallon of water and plenty of the hot chilis, and In that region of Mexico they ripen so hot that not even the rattlesnake will dare take refuge in their shade. Upon this be ginning lay as much of a side of beef in oce piece as may be squeezed into the pot. Set the cover on this olla and lute it down with clay. Then put the pot Into the fire and heap the glowing coals all over it, with particular atten tion to the 'id. so that the luting may bake into brick. Keep the fire burning slowly all day long. When night has come scatter the embers, break the brick seal of the olla, fork out and throw away whatever of the meat re mains solid. The remainder is the chili con carne. No sauce is needed. The Love Affairs of Handel. Women greatly admired Handel, who was very handsome, .but the serenity of the composer seems only to have been ruffled twice by love on his part. His first attachment was to a London girl, a member of the aris tocracy. Her parents believed him beneath her in social position, but were good enough to say that if he ab stained from writing any more music the question of marriage might be en tertained. It was easier to abstain from their daughter than from his an. and he did so. Years after almost the same thing occurred. Handel and an other beautiful pupil of his fell in love with each other, and proud parents gave him the choice . between giving u$- his profession or their daughter. Music, "heavenly maid." was chosen. "The Love Affairs of Some Famous Men." Hitting the Doctor. As today, in the days gone by the doctors were made the target of the jester's fling. Pausanias, the Spartan general, when asked by a physician how it was that he was never ill. exultingly answered, "Because 1 never consult you." At another time Pausanias said that the best physician was the one who dispatched his patients with the least possible suffering. Pausanias, strongly disapproving of a certain physician and his methods and berating him in no mild terms, was asked by a friend how. as he had never consulted that particular doctor, he could be so sure of his statements. Pausanias answered. "Well, had I con sulted him would 1 be living today?" A Summer Without Nights. To the summer visitor in Sweden there is nothing more striking than the almost total absence of night A Stockholm, the Swedish capital, the sun goes down a few minutes before 10 o'clock and rises again four hours later during a greater part of the month of June. But the four hours the sun lies hidden in the frozen north are not hours of darkness. The refraction of his rays as he passes around the north pole makes midnight as light as a cloudy midday and enables one to read the finest print without artificial light at any time during the "night." Put on His Guard. Little Brother iwho has just been given some candy If 1 were you 1 shouldn't take sister yachting this aft ernoon. Ardent Suitor Why do you say that? Little Brother Well. 1 heard her tell mother this morning that she feared she'd have to throw you over. Exchange. The Dearest Dot. Poetical Lady Is there anything on earth-that you long for at times witb a great yearning? Mere Man Yes. there is. When 1 draw two cards to three aces there is one spot that I vearn for with all my But the lady had left him. Toledo Blade. Transformation. An English farmer had a number of guests to dinner and was aboiu to help them to some rabbit when he discov ered that the dish was cold. Calling the servant, he exclaimed. "Her. Mary, take this rabbit out and eat it and bring ir back a little "otterl" Different. Willie Did the doctor make, you take nasty medicine when yon were sic:? Freddie No; it was father who made me take it Exchange. Oh, the Difference! "You look pretty this evening." the bachelor said to his fair companion. She gazed at him philosophically. "1 am sure you mean that well."' she re plied, "but you have no idea how such a-speech wrings the heart of one like me or wouid If 1 had not become hard ened to the inevitable. Nobody ever says to me. 'You are pretty.' It is al ways 'You look pretty.' There is a dif ference as wide 'as the wideness of the sea.' The girl who really is pretty never has to give the subject a thought. Nothing she can do or leave undone affects the vital fact that she is pretty. The girl whom nature has not thus dowered must be forever trying to make herself 'look pretty.' Of course in a way she deserves far more, credit for making herself acceptable to the public than the pretty girl does also It is a compliment to her taste, in genuity, skin and various other mental qualities to assure her she has attained success but it always reminds her of the battle she must continually wage." Exchange. The Summerless Year. The year 181(3 was called the "year without a summer." Spring came that year, but in its faintest form. Snow, cold rains and winds were incessant. It was the 1st of June before the first left the ground. The farmers planted their crops, but the seed would hardly sprout, and when they came to the sur face there was not heat enough to make the frail plants grow. It is re corded that during the month of June birds froze to death In the woods and fields. Small fruits, such as there were, rotted on the stem, there being no birds to eat them. But little corn matured. Only in sheltered spots were good sized roasting ears to be found. Frosts prevailed every month In the year and almost daily. The people after repeated hopes of a change for the better settled down almost In de spair. The like of, it was never known in the country before and, fortunately, has never been repeated. New xork American. Tolstoy and the Bear. When Count Tolstoy was a young man he took part in a bear hunt that nearly ended fatally. When the beast charged him Tolstoy fired and missed. He fired a second shot, which hit the bear's jaw and lodged between bis teeth. Tolstoy was knocked down, fall ing with his face in the snow. "There,' he thought; "all is over with me." He drew his head as far as possible be tween his shoulders, exposing chiefly his thick fur cap to the beast's mouth till she was able to tear with her upper teeth only the cheek under the left eye and with the lower teeth the skin of the left part of the forehead. At this moment the famous bear hunt leader. Ostashkof. ran up with a small switch In his hands and cried out his usual "Where are you getting to? Where are you getting to?" This, says Tolstoy, sent the bear scuttling off at her ut most speed. The Real Old Article. The stranger in Boston was inter ested in the old family names of tdat city. He bore a strong letter of in troduction to a prominent townsman. "1 can give you from memory ths names of all the old families of our city." the prominent townsman said, and he rattled off two or three dozens at an amazing rate. The stranger looked up from his copy pad expectantly. "Is that all?" he asked. "I have given you a complete list of Boston's leading families." the promi nent townsman replied. "Not one of them dates back less than six genera tions." The stranger stared. "But surely you bave other old fam ilies of note in Boston?" "Merely transients." icily replied the Boston man. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Good and Bad. A remarkably brief, effective sum ming up was once quoted by Lord James in an after dinner speech. It was delivered by an Irisb judge trying a man for pig stealing. The evidence of his guilt was conclusive, but the prisoner insisted on calling a number of witnesses, wbo testified most em phatically to his general good character. After hearing tbeir evidence and tbe counsel's speeches tbe indsre remarked. "Gentlemen of the jury, 1 think that the only conclusion you cau arrive at s that the pig was stolen b.v the prisoner and that he Is the most amiable man in the county." London Chronicle. Not Her Fault. Tbe 'mistress coms dome without warning. She finds the maid in gala attire. "Why. what do yon mean." sbe cries, "by wearing my best black skirt?" "it Is not my fault." replies the maid. "Madam locked up ail ber colored ones." Cleveland Plain Defler. Volnnin Ash. The destructive PhilinDine volcanoes have value fo" on thing at iast. says a writer in the Pacific Monthly. They are diectlv resDonsiblfl for the finest hemo producing area in the world. Hemp thrives in a oil heavily Impregnated with volcanic ash. His Ssira. "How do you oronose to support my daughter, young man?" "But, sir, l was only proposing to marry ber." Exchange. Opinion. Stella What do you tbiDk of marry ing a nobleman? v Bella It is like buying a fish Instead of catching it. New Vork Times. How blessings orighten as they take their flight! oung. Freo Sample afsy s UIIs Something can and mast be dond 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 tot the condition of the stomach and bowels. ' A child should have two full and free) 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 sound elsep. But it is equally important to know what' to give the child in tha emergency of constipation and indiges tion. Cathartics are too strong1 and salts and other purgatives are not only too strong, but the child refuses them be cause of their bad taste. Have you ever tried Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin? It is a liquid tonic that families have been vising for a quarter of a century. It la mild, pleasant-tasting and promptly ef fective. It is pood for you as well as the child, but there is nothing better to be tound for children. They like its taste you will not have to force them to take it. First of all, if you have not yet used it. Dr. Caldwell would like to send you a sample bottle free of charpre. In this way you can try it before buying. Later, when convinced of its merits, you can get it of your druggist at fifty. cents and one dollar a bottle, just as thousands of other families are doing. The family of Mr. D. W. Spangler of Strattonville. Pa., as well as that of Mr. A. P. Johnson of Walnut Grove. Tenn.. started with it In that way and now write that it Is thelp one family necessitv next to foort itself. If you are unfortunate enough tchave a sickly child, one given to constipation and indigestion, you should send for a free sample of this remedv. Di. Caldwell personally will be pleased to give you any medical advice you may desire for yourself or familv pertaining to the stomach, liver or bowels absolutely free of charge. Explain your case in a letter and he wiT! reply to you in detail. Fop the free sample simply send your name and address on a postal card or otherwise. For either reauest the doctor's address Is Dr. W. B. Caldwell, R.500 Cald well building, Monticclio. I1L For sale by J. G. Hall. OUR LANGUAGE UNIFORM- While Great Britian, For Instance, Has Many Different Languages. It has been! observed that the lan guages spoken in the United; States is remarkably uniform True, there are many dialects, but Great Brit ian, less in area than any one of a half a dozen of cur states, con tain such very different languages as English, Welsh and the Gaelic of Scottish highlands, to say nothing of the provincial dialects of Corn wall and Yorkshire and the unique speech of the London cockney, while in this country with its vast ex panse of territory, its settlement by Spanish, French, Dutch and Swed ish colonists and its millions of imigrants drawn from nearly every country, large and small, all over the world, there is far greater uni formity of speech than in any oth er land of equal area and popula tion. The causes can he readily seen. The public schools have made us a nation: of readers, and the press has supplied books and papers without limit. Press associations have done their part toward giving a uniform and fairly good tone to the newspa- per language cf the day- The' tele graph, the telephone and cheap pos tage have brought distant ports of the country into quick and easy com munication.and so have aided in teaching a common language. The railroad has penetrated every cor-? ner of the land and made us a nation of travelers. Countless hu man shuttles thus are thrown dai ly across he land in every direcion, carrying with them the threads of thought and speech and doing their, part to make one pattern of the; whole. No doubt our maps, which, still present so many different kinds of names, will in time lose the strangeness and the "'foreign air" that are so noticeable now. H. M. King, in St. Nicholas. Starts . Much Trouble. If all people knew that neglect of constipation would result in severe indigestion, yellow jaundice or virtu lent liver trouble they would soon take Dr. King's New Life Pills, and end it-t Its the only safe way. Best for biliousness, headache, dys pepsia, chills and debility. 25c. at J. G. Hall's. TpyTSils OVERNIGHT CURE FOR COLD IN HEAD OR CHEST It is Curing Thousands Daily, and Saves Time and Money. Get a bowl three quarters full of boiling water, and a towel. Pour into the water a scant tea spoonful of HYOMEI (pronounce High-o-me) . Put your head over the bowl and cover head and bowl with towel. Breathe the vapor that arises for a few minutes, and presto! your head is as clear as a bell, and the tightness in the chest is gone. It's a pleasant cure. You'll enjoy breathing HYOMEI. You'll feel a ence its soothing, healing and bene ficial effects as it passes over the inflamed and irritated membrane.; 50 cents a bottle, at druggists even rywhere. Ask J. G- Hall for extra; bottle HYOMEI inhalent. ,J For i
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
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Nov. 3, 1911, edition 1
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