Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / April 20, 1906, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 SA VILI1 FROM CATARRH OF LUNGS ViT SO COMMON IN WIN E IB TAKING PE41U-NA. Sore Throat Develops Into Bronchitis. llrg Addie Ilarding, 121 W. Brighton Are., Syracuse, fl. Y., writes: "I have teen a user of Peruna for the past twelve Jre. With me it is a sure preventive f colds and many other ills. Iwo or three times a vear 1 Mrs. Al1i Harding-, troubled ith my "throat, a bind of raw feeling, turning to bronchitis. 1 have bad the services of my physician in each case. Two years ago, when 1 elt . Mell coming 1 tried I'eruna to check it, and to my delight was not troubled with the smoth ered and choking feeling and never have been since. 1 can check it every time with M4f r H r in "LEADER" AND "REPEATER" SHOTGUN SHELLS Carefully inspected shells, the best of powder, shot and wadding, loaded by machines which give invariable results account for the superior ity of Winchester "Leader" and "Repeater" Factory Loaded Smokeless Powder Shells. Reliability, velocity, pattern and penetration are determined by . scientific apparatus and practical experiments. They are THE SHELLS THE CHAMPIONS SHOOT mm Paradoxical though it may seem, it takes a good wife to make a good husband. So. 31-'OG. H. H, Gbeex's Boss, ot Atlanta, (la., ar. theonlysuecessful Dropsy Specialists lntiia world. See their liberal offer iu advordsu Bjent ui another column of ttiU paper. The pay of the Chinese soldiers figures xactly eighteen cents per week. BOX OF WAFERS FREE-NO DRUG) CURES Br AB3O3PTI0N. , Cores Hatching of Ga-i B.I .I5reth ami Bail Stomach Shoit Breathe Wloatln; Sour Eructations Irresnlar Heart, Ktc. Take a Mull's Wafer any time of the day or night, and note the immediate good et fect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas. disinfects the stomach, kills the poison ferms and cures the disease. Catarrh ot he head and throat, unwholesome food and overeating make ; bad stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from taint of some -kind. Mull'a Anti-Belch Wafers will make your stomach healthy by absorbing foul gases which arise from the undigested food and by re-enforcing the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices. Ihis cures stomach trouble, pro motes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching and fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through this process. . . . Discard drugs, as you know from experi nce they do not cure stomach trouble. Try a common-sense (Nature's) method that does cure. A aoothing, healing sen stion results instantly. We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want you to know it. This offer niiiy not appear again. 3176 U2 Snd this coupon with yonr name and address and your druggist's name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample lrfe i! you have never used Mull'a Anti-Belch Wafers, and will .also end you a cer tificate good for .25c- toward the pur chase of wore Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou ble: cures bv absorption. Address Mull's ;riArr. Toxic Co., 328 3d Ave., Bock island. 111. Qiv Full Address and Wri'f Tlahdy. All druggists, 50c. per bos, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. Any man who is capable of thinking real thoughts never gets lonesome. Itch cured in SO minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion ; never fails. Sold by Druggists. Mall orders promptly filled by fir. Detehon, Crawfordsville, ind. $1. Women in China have the privilege of fighting in the wars. HERITAGE OF CIVIL WAR. Thousands of Soldier Contracted Clironlo Kidney Trouble While In the Service. The experience of Capt. John L. Ely, f Co. E, 17th Ohio, now living at 500 East Second street. Newton, Kansas, will interest the thou sands of veterans who came bad: from the Civil War suffering tor tures with kidney com plaint. Capt. Ely says: T contracted kidney trouble durinc the Civil j War, ana tue occasional cse. At one time ; I had fd ose n crutch and cane' to get,; about. My back was lr.mi and weak, and besides the aching, there was a distressing re tention of the kidney secretions. I was in a bad way when . began nsin Doan's Kidney Tills in 1001, but the remedy co'ed me, and 1 have been well ever since." Sold by all dealers. 0 cents a box. JFoster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. 1 I 7-. :.t INTER Mr. Virginia Caviana. Chronic Catarrh of Throat and Lungs. .ra. V nifinia Cavirna, room 32. Lam bridge Block, Portland, Ore., wiites: "I was a sufferer .nth catarrh of the throat and lungs for a. long time before I'eruna was recommended to me. 1 gave it a trial, dt hough 1 thought at the time it would be just like other medicines and o me no good. I was pleased to find that my improvement began in less than two weeks and continued u til I was entirely wJJ. I gained nearly "5 poui.ds, have a r.plendid appetite and am grateful for what vonr medieme hns done for me." 1 M l eekness is self-mastery, i ' We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chekey & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, hav known F. J. Cheney for the lust 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac tions and financially ablo to carry out any obligations made by their Arm. Vest A Tkuax, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O. Wilding, Kixxax & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75e. per bottl. Sold by all Druggist?. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Giraffes are the most difficult of all ani mals to tnke by surprise. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Brotno Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. B. W. Grove's signature on each box. 25s; - The coldest city in the world is Yakutsk, Eastern Siberia. One Told by Fitzgerald. Ex-Congressman Fitzgerald of Bos ton, who passed the summer at Old Orchard, told this story of the clam bake of the Redberry, club, held at Pine Point late In August: , ' A chaplain had been called upon to officiate for the regular clergyman in congress early in the term. The min ister was about to conclude his pray er, and reverent silence pervaded the big chamber, when the members were startled to hear the following sentence drop from the lips of the chaplain pro teni.r "May corruption and tin in every form be as far from every mem ber of thi3 body as Thoui art, O Lord!" It was several seconds before the members fully grasped the meaning of the clergyman's prayer, and when it did it was unanimously in favor of having another substitute when the regular chaplain was unable to attend A feature of our iron and steel trade during recent weeks has been the reappearance of the United States as a buyer, on a scale sufficiently large to be noticeable. These orders are the outcome o the extraordinary activity of the American trade, says Engineering, the demand being so reat that the country's own mills are unequal to it. ' t ' TliE EDITOR ; explains How to Koep ITp Mental and , l'hylcal Vigor. . A New Jersey editor writes: "A long indulgence in improper food brought on a condition of nervous dys pepsia, nearly three years ago, go severe that I had to quit wbrk entirely. I put myself on a strict regimen of Grape-Nuts food, with plenty of out door exercise and in a few months found my stomach so far restored that the process of digestion gave me pleas ure instead of distress. "It also built up my strength so that I was able to resume my ;' business, which is onerous, as I not only edit my own paper, but also do a great deal of 'outside' writing. "I find that tbe Grape-Nuts diet en ables me to write with greater vigor thact everbefore, and without the feel ing1 of brain-fag with which I used to be troubled. As to bodily vigor I can and do walk miles every day without fatigue a few squares used to weary me before I began to live ou Grape Nius!" Name given by Postutu Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a rearon. Read tbe little book, "The Uoad to Wellville," in plcgs. I I : -. .. ' ""1 I i AN UNCORRUPTlf O PRF?5?-. ' - " I . - ..- Coverninent Obligation. IH1 writer of this article has given considerable thought to the good roads proposition as embodied in the Brownlow-Latimer bill, and has reached the only conclusion possible that Congress ought to quickly pass this bill Into law. Indeed,, wo do not believe there can be suggested a sin gle good reason why it should not be done. We all know that the highways are as essent al to our civilization as the mill3 which grind our wheat and corn are essential to our physical comfort. We know that every pound of farm produce is to be moved over the "highways before it can reach the railroad or the waterway for ship ment; must irst traverse the highways before it can reach the consumer. The road conditions in all but two or three States are deplorable, 5n ninny sec tions worst than vhen first opened up. and in few sections are ithey at all satisfactory. The Stales have dealt with the highway question from the beginning of their existence as States. No solution has yet been found. The reason is not far to seek. The bur den of road construction and main tenance has always fallen upon the farmers those' least able to bear it, while those equally benefited and best able to boar the expen.se have escaped almost wholly the obligation. The so lution is in an equal distribution of cost. This -an be reached in but one way. The Government of the United States lays duties on consumption. In this way the oulk of the money coming into the national treasury is derived from all clashes, in town and country alike. Everybody contiibutes to it. The proposed good roads legislation covers the case of necessity, because It takes back to the people in equita ble share that which they have con tributed to the govern :n cut and pro vides for improvements" that will strengthen all our -institutions -and make the country mere prosperous than it hes ever hecu. The govern ment uses ti.c highways as If it owned them in fee simple, and yet contributes not one cent to their maintenance. It sends its agents along the country roads, and permits no one to Impede their progress. At the beginning Congress authorized the establishment of post roads. The government has not established such roads, but. uses those already in existence, claiming unimpeded right-of-way wherever it chooses to yo. The argument is not far fetched that the government owes it as an obligation to the people to aid in systematic road building in .all States, contributing in this way to the general welfare. a ud furthering the purposes for which government itseU' is sustained ' by - its loyal citi zens. The friends of national -aid to road improvement only ask the fair discharge of a government obligation. -Brooklyn;. Uptown Wee ly. Improved Koads In lle Kasr. Assistant Director M. O. Eldridge. of the (inee of Public Koad Inquiries, re cently made a road inspection trip throth the States of Maine, Mass'a eliusttts and New York. In regard to-tle road conditions in these States lie ad the following to say in an in terview: "I jam fully convinced from my re cent '.rip that the roads which have beonSuilt in the East through Ihe aid of thc States and under the direction of highway commissioners are the best roads in the United St-.tes, and are equal', if not superior, to the best roads in the world. This is duo to the fact that these roads have been built under intelligent supervision, by skillful workueu, out of the very best materi als, a rd with American oad building machinery; whereas most of th'j roads that iiave seen in the Id country were .built by hand, and have since been Maintained in the same way. In spite tf the long drought which pre vailed 'throughout the New England States 'during the spring and summer the Strte Toads were Arm and smooth, and although I personally inspected over X0 miles of improved roads, 1 did not see a single one which had raveled or which had signs of wear from tbe recent dry weather. In the southeastern part of . Massachusetts and aloig Cape Cod Bay, and iu the southert part of Connecticut, the old roads wate composed entirely of sand, but in kite of the dry weather the State ro;Is built on these sand foun dations ' are remarkably hard and smooth.". " - - " Lesson 1'or Doubters. Before we had any rock and shell roads between this place and Hock ledge a two mule team pulled sixteen boxes of oranges from there to be loaded ol the cars, and ft" was about all ihey cmld pull. Now ;hat we have hard roads ti at same team of mules pulls thirty- vo boxes of oranges over the same route with greater ease than they foraerly pulled sixteen. Let doubters jigure the gain. Cocoa am' Koekledge iFla.) News. t . Rlouey Well Spint. At the rtquest of the Minnesota Good Roads Association the City Council of ! Minneapolis has agreed to an annual expenditure of ?2u,00 for the improve ment of the main thoroughfares inside of the clt;- limits In addition to the usual wai-4 expenditures. Good Roads Magazine. 1 ' Magnetic cumpasses are to lie sup plied in fufW? to all Drllish and native i-avnlry re:ir'!iis hi India at ths rate of four a squadron. T fha Amerlran Newspnper May ITa Faults Itut It is Not Venal. The insurance corruptionists had no difficulty in obtaining the services of leading members of the bar to protect and defend them, muses the New York World. They had their allies and as sistants among Ahe financiers of Wall Street. They found friends In the In lurance Department, in the Legislature and even in Congress." '.But of the New York daily newspapers not one has been their accomplice or their "ally. It is this fact that gives dispropor tionate importance to Andrew Hamil ton's statement that he paid out over $200,000 to influence newspapers. Of the truth of this charge there i3 not a scrap of proof. It lacks both detail and corroboration. If this money had been expended its results mast have been public in the venal expressions of the papers purchase... Thpir corrup tion could not be concealed if they gave any consideration for the money that Hamilton claimed to have paid them. So far as the New York daily press is concerned Andrew Hampton's state ment is certainly false. The New York newspapers unanimously attacked in surance corruption, and they carefully printed every fact which came to their knowledge. Evidence that any of these papers received bribe money could readily have been used to still their ut terances or to destroy their power by exposure. It is morally and mentally inconceivable that if McCurdy or Mc Call or Alexander or Ilyde or liege man or Hamilton or Hendricks or Odell or Piatt, or any one of the long list of men involved, had had any evidence of newspaper pecuniary corruption, he would have not long since produced it. Mr. Hughes would have been the first to make public any such information in his possession. In this respect the daily press of New York is most certainly above pe cuniary suspicion and higher, than any other calling, occupation or profession, including the bench and the bar if Mr. Jerome's accusation has any foundation in fact Even the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Diocesan Convention successfully frowned down a moderate resolution of disapprobation of the men who had a hand in the insurance cor ruption. Alone of all the great professions in New York, its daily press can show a clean financial record throughout this scandal. The "sensational newspaper"' has many faults, exaggeration being the cardinal one. It might be and should be more accurate, more thor ough, more considerate, .more careful. Cut it is not venal. WORDS OF WISDOM. It takes a heroine to be economical. -Unloch. Glory should follow, not be pursued. Pliny, Jr. - Benevolent feeling ennobles the mos trifling actions. Thackeray. The usual fortjunc of complaint is to excite contempt more than pity. Johnson. A given force applied for a given time upon a given point is bound to win. Napoleon. Courage consists not in blindly over looking danger, but. in meeting it with the eyes open. Rkhtcr. Character is a bundle of habits. Habits originate in the mind and are registered on the body. George D. Tripp. Every person has 1 wo educations; one which he receives from others and one. more important, which he gives himself. Giblon. The mere lapso of years is not life; knowledge, truth, love, beauty, good ness, faith alone can give vitality to the mechanism of existence. Marcus Aurelius. Half the sorrows of women would be averted if they could repress the speech they know to be useless nay, tbe speech they have resolved not t" utter. George Eliot. Fortunes In Texas Salpluu Another revelation comes . from Texas. Ten million tons, of sulphur have been found in the Transpecos region, the sulphur fields extending over about 10.000 acres, with a thick ness averaging nine and one-half feet. The ore is the result of natural chem ical conditions produced during the lacustrine period, which was one of tbe phenomena of the arid sections of Texas during the pliocene age, and its appearance to mortal gaze In the twen tieth, century is expected to stay the hand of the importer for twenty years to come. The importation of native sulphur from Italy and other countries amounts to from 80,000 4o 200,000 tons per year. So. large has been the de mand for sulphur oO.OOO tons being consumed in one year that the sub stitution of iron pyrites has beeu re sorted to in the manufacture of sul phuric acid. With 30,000,000 tons ot forty per cent, native ore sulphur to hand, certain manufacturing processes, it is expected, will be reduced twenty per cent, and the present rate of im porting will be offset for twenty years. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch. A Harlx.r For Airship. All interesting series of experiments to test the 'military value of airships is about to be made by the French art'ilry. It may be premised that the fa' of their value may be taken as established to a certain point to the satisfaction of the French military au Ihoritiea." since a permanent 'harbor" for airships has been, established in the artillery quarter of the garrison of Toul. Thia( "harbor" will be used as a continual eenire for studying the question as tu what services can be obtained from 'airships' to aid the de fense of a i'ortiiieJ pla:s sioiro. Witj thc Biimty . -. The Keason, Some men who were breaking the laws Were caught with the goods in their paws When asked why they lied . They calmly replied, ' "Well, possibly, maybe because." . J. K. P. Which? "How's your flirtation with that pretty lady barber coming along-;" "Poorly. She cut me this morning." "On the street or in Ihe chair?" Oli, Yes. - "John!" "What, dear?" " "Doesn't the Postofneo Department have a special service for. letters marked Tn haste?' " Why He Couldn't Stay. Hewitt "I'm going to move again." Jewitt "But I thought you liked the flat where you lived." Hewitt "Well, it was n" good fit when I rented it, but I've ta ken on weight since." ruck. ' ."" " Apprehenslvei , "Do you think the ranania uanal will be a good thing?" "I don't know," answered Mr. Dustin Stax. "There is so much prejudice against graft that good things are get ting scarcer every year." Washington Star. Correct. "Now, gentleman," said the lecturer an commerce and manufactures, "men tion one of the most important col lateral branches of the oil business." "Writing for the magazines." prompt ly responded the student who keeps abreast of the times. Yon Iters Wooers. Mother "That young man comes much earlier in the evenings, now, than he used to in the summer, doesn't he, Laura?" Daughter "Oh. yes, mi; but.' you know, it gets dark so much earlier now!" Yonkers Statesman. Caught. "I must confess." he said, in a sud den burst of confidence, "that I'm an odd man. I long to be different " "Oh! this is so sudden," exclaimed Miss Passay, throwing herself upon his neclr, for she, too, was odd and longed to be even. Philadelphia Press. Knew His Boiiie. "Dr. Goodleigh seems to have bad tvonderful success in raising funds for the new church." "Yes. You know he' appointed Mr. riammersleigh. (he reformed grt-rich-quick man, as chairman of 1 lie nuance committee." Chicago TlocoviMIeraM. Cause For Joy. "You seem happy, old num." "I am. I own a bicycle now," "Why, I thought you put your wheel away several years ago and slopped using it." -So I did, but I just paid the last in stalment on it last week." I'liila::; phia Press. Ho Won. Crimsonhcafc "IIw did you come out on your bet?" Yeast "What bet?" "Why, last night, when you wont home late after the raflle for the tur key, you said you'd bet you'd get rats from your wife." "Oh, yes; 1 won." Yonkers. States man. . . , Tl i Cosloiujiry I.nrV. Mr. Maklnbrakes (determined not to make a blunder this timet "I was de lighted with the way in whirls the little girl recited that selection." Elderly Matron (one of the guests) "You. evidently are muter the impres sion that she is one of my children. She isn't, and I thought her perform ance was extremely tiresome." Chi cago Tribune. - Jtlorinz. "I::," said Tommy Twaddles, "ibis here mythology book says that Orpheus was such a fine musician th't he made j trees an' stones move.' "Your sister Teresa nas urpneus near a c ity block," grumbled Pa Twaddles. "Her piano playing has made twenty families move out of this Hat building in the last two mouths." Cleveland Leader. Provoking SIlt:ilie. The caller Was angry, and even bel ligerent. 'T want an explanation and an apol ogy, sir," he said. "In your paper this morning you had an account of the wedding at the Smith by s' last, uisut, and you spoke of 'the jay that attend ed the happy pair, as they went to the altar.' Now. sir. I'm the "Gracious heaven!" gasped the editor. "I wrote It 'joy!' "Chicago Tribune.. Slight Mistake. "You evidently believe In advertising your business," remarked the facetious bystander. "Vot you mean by dose, huh?" quer ied the member of the little German ) baud. "You are always blowing your own. horn." said the f. b." in explanation. - 'fjut vns where you donM know soniedings, meppy," replied the wind jammer. "Dis vos a porrowed putle, aireaty." Chicago News. THE WEEKLY Cit tUe .lCuJera What They Like Mm to Talk About. Tn defining, or. rather, deteriEt&iirR-1 what is news for; a! country tow t ho f personality of fh news gatharcr mvpt I be lost, said W. R. Prewitt. or t!w Onawa (Iowa) Gazette, at the meeting! of the Corn Belt editors at Sheldon. If t I or she must learn to bury "self." Ytmri readers and the public are entiti.1 fc-f be given an news that, concern ; !lkfr both your personal friends and.. yonr-j bitterest enemies. However, country editors seldom have enpmle'. Bwl, speaking seriously, no editor sirmM have friends or enemies when deJioiijff i what is news in a country town. It ok f a fact that usually the fellow witft 1 whom you like to converse Is Itw osir who will talk about the Bubjeels otclt j most interest you. This same iWnxi applies more forcibly in tlje editing fj? a country newspaper. t If you would please the gtvates number your opportunity to claim their attention through your columns aft to make them know they are 'g-;K-their money's Avorth when they aie in duced to come around once a year ami pay their dues is to find out what tliejr is no reason why you should not recog nize it as such in your next issut. f course this refers to real news ,tvn3 which every man with a iiosi for aews will recognize. What is sometiiaes not news is nsrrs. There are some bapyv ings which everybody knows ti funr your paper is issued, or at least ft would seem that everybody was lamit iar with the matter. Yet every one of these people will look your !iim:tx through to see in what langraef yon tell the story, if for no other rvasoM than to disagree with your version, y There is a wonderful advantage i the determining what is news by tb acquaintance you have over yonr" Ter ritory.1 The editor of :i counUy weekly should be the bef-t informed luau iu hU locality on the geography of L's i-v,n;1y-. He should know, as far"":' posisib!". every road, every school lion-e and every country church iu the co.intj atui extend his acquaintance to'th'j "widest extent possible with its inhabitant:.. Then when threads, of news, vhic happens nearly every week, corm1 rloai- ing to you, you will be the belter pre pared to set at the required faeiY. lit the handling of news from diMsuf lo cahties and troni other towns one ;m.t.t depend very largely in fact, .-.lniir wholly upon his corresporidfM'tP. if he- has no . knowledge of his', people aiul their environments. , i Out- oil r.racc. Some years ago in Alabama one t Hie most talented lawyers practising irt the South was the late Colonel l.'agv but he had a peppery temper. . Not only did Colonel Jiragg's de position involve him from time to. tune in serious dili'erences with 'hi leagues, but it also led him to b;e.-& off amicable relations with, . a -I ui'gt: Kobiuson, a most estimable jurist. wh. while presiding over a suit in whirl Bragg was interested, ,had by his de cision incurred 11i roseutmoiit .f th- advocate. So, for a long lime t'lvJ Col onel declined even to speal? to "tH Judge, save when it was abulutely neecssury iu the course of business. Finally, however, his belies-. nntutV getting the upper hand. Colonel Kragg determined to apologize to Jndge Hob inson and oudeavor to effect a miew;! of their former comparatively please r relations. Meeting the Judg.-? one aft leruoon on the steps of the State !lous he impulsively thrust out his baud aixt said: . "See here. Judge, let's, i 1 again. This thing has gnn'i r.u Ion;.: eaoujrli."' . Vi , j "Why cr, Bragg," askel h Ji i' in the meekest and mildest way i;ivl agiimble. "what's the matter?' -A "Simply this. Judge," columned llv fiery Bragg. "I admire yea o uy mensely that I cannot for my life ;; content longer. to remain on bad terms w I feit that I inuit speak t i you. "Why er, Bragg," piped ti:-- Judi in the thinnest of voices, a w e) 'el. look of astonishment on his I in, ' w"j t. JVU UVMJi: lo me?" At this th lawyer" willed. I'M .vir Tarrisso. in JJppineott's. How tlie Ktkiitio Siol tt. , , t "No man is fonder of tobacco than si Eskimo," said the Arctic traveler' a his club. "Tbf Eskimo depends; fi x iu lusknno depends; Um i ceo solely on the white icrI oouurt of it he would self hi J ll is tobac l or a pouu oldest son. "It is odd to see an Eskimo smoke He chops his tobacco line .mk! mix'. it with chopped willow twig, so-' io make it go farther. Thea be clean; out with a picker of bone iLeajt stone bowl of his pipe, and then m plucks a lock of b;iir from'.Vis dwr skiu suit and ram it down in the lux torn of the pipe bowl, so as io provfMjf any of the finely chopped tobacco froc escaping into the stem. ' ':' ' J "Finally he lights the pipe; in-a smokes it iu a nwift series. of JpititJ strong puffs, "so that there may bejittrf waste. Each puff is 4 inhaled into the lungs, and the first pfr smoke is stUl streaming from the-mak trils long after another pnT has liewf started. There must be, you "see-, .ji J waste. There must be nw of tfli vain combustion of tobacco witl on . benefit to tho smoker whivU goes .vf continually among us. I "Often the most experienced Eskir f will smoke so hard and fast that t-.-will stream from his eyes-, he v cough violently, and cornet inies Hgo and nausea will seize him." York Press. v. ' If i'ie world were birdie-.-:, a list d;vl.ires, n:ni i-uM i;uc in! wl'ier nine ye?.i 'Jiue, want to talk about and give it to 'iiejn as news. Because your contemporary f down the street captured an item hti week which you failed to connect 'tvittjV j
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 20, 1906, edition 1
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