Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / April 23, 1925, edition 1 / Page 2
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IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THI? AND OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN DAYS GIVEN THE HEWS J[_THE SOUTH What la Taklrvg Wac# In TN tout* land Will Be Found In ?rlef Paragraph* Foreign ? Liquor is to be sold in stores in Saskatchewan, controlled by the Can adian government, under a new liquor law which has gone into effect after a dry period of more than eight years. Led by Lord Rothmere's string of newspapers, a section of the British press has begun sniping Field Marshal von Hindenburg's candidacy for pros-, ident of Germany. Court martial to try Lieut. J. S. Thompson. V. S. A., for the nuirder of "Miss Audrey Burleigh, of Memphis. Tenn.. at Manila. P. I., this month, ?will not be convened until a medical board now observing Lieutenant Thompson completes its report. Offi cials say it probably will be two weeks before preliminaries for the trial are completed. Three British, cruisers, the Calcutta. Curlew and Constance. will visit Washington about June 9. it is an nouncde at Ottawa. Canada. The cruisers are part of a British fleet which will be in Canada waters dur ing the summer. Fritz Haarmann. the Hanover. Ger many butcher, who was sentenced to j death last winter for having killed a | large number of men and boys, has ; paid the penalty by being beheaded by the German authorities. A reign of terror seems to have been precipitated in Bulgaria. Many per- ? sons were killed and injured by the explosion of an infernal machine in the cathedral d urine: the funeral serv ices General Georghieff. who was re- | cently murdered on the principal street of Sofia. The cathedral in which the service was held was the scene of a bomb explosion which kill ed several persons and wounded many j ethers, but government ministers present were unharmed. Paul Painleve again is the potential premier o? France, owing to Aristide Briand's inability to form a govern ment without either support or co operation from the Socialists. The million rubees that Mumtaz Be gum thought she would obtain from the estate of her slain lover. Kudir | Baula. has' shrunk to 100.000. and Mumtaz has gone to court to get the matter adjusted. London newspapers ; shows that the elimination of one ? nought will prove costly to the Maha rajah's favorite. Newspapers from Cannes. France, j to London newspapers say that H. G. ; Wells, of "Outline of History" fame, i is playing hermit on a remote moun tain side in sotuhern France. Wells is ( engaged in another important work, which requires solitude. Washington ? Additional light on the recent army courtmartial at Honolulu has been giv en the war department in supplemen tal reports, which shows that the sol diers convicted had plotted a revolu tionary uprising. President CooIidg? jerked 1.S69 Eas ter tourists through the handshaking line in three-quarters of an hour, al- ; most one to a second, which sets a new record for handshaking. More than 70 per cent of the veter ans eligible for the bonus have applied for its benefits. The three million mark in applications has been passed already. Every woman who wears furs will be asked by the American . Humane association to give SI to a campaign fund for elimination of the non-killing steel trap used to capture fur-bearing , animals. Attorney General Sargent announces that an appeal will lie taken to the Supreme court from the decision of Federal Judge Weste.nhaver at Cleve land. dismissing the government's anti trust suit against the General Electric company. Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company and the Wes tinghouse Lamp company. Washington officials do not regard the report of renewed revolutionary activity in Honduras as indicating a serious disturbance. Cold storage of eg,gs have more than doubled in the last year, the depart- ; ment of agriculture reports. On April ! 1. 1 .156.'>00 cases were reported in storage, compared with 579.000 on the same day a year ago and S06.<V'0 five j years ago. Representative William A Oldfield. j of Arkansas, chairman of the Demo- ; cratic congressional committee and j the party's "whip" in the house, was | recently operated on for acute appendi- ! citis and his condition is described as j "satisfactory." Minister Jay at Bucharest has pre sented a communication to the Rou manian government calling attention to the fact that the government has negotiated debt refunding agreements with other nations, but- has taken no such'' action in connection with its debt to the United States. The department of Justice will co operate with the shipping board in fighting an injunction against sale of five "President-type" vessels of the Dollar Steamship company, which Is sought by the Pacific Mail Steamship company, rival bidders for the boats. An elaborate program of entertain ment for President-Elect Machado of Cuba during his visit in Washington has been completed by state depart ment officials and approved by the president. The shipping board has formally asked the supreme court of the Dis trict of Columbia to dismiss the pro ceedings whereby the Pacific Mail Steamship company seeks to prevent consummation of the sale of five Pres ident-type ships to the Dollar inter ests. The investigation by the department of justice into an alleged monopoly by a "fertilizer" trust probably will not be completed for several weeks yet, Attorney Crcneral Sargent says. Domestic ? At Crown Point. Ind.. Mrs. Anna Cunningham, charged with the mur der of one of five members of her family who have died in the- past six years, confessed in the county jail to Sheriff Benjamin H. Strong that she had poisoned three of her children. Gov. William J. fields, the other day. matched his accumulated practi- j | cal legal study of many years against i the Kentucky state bar examiners for j ; a certificate to practice law. The gov I ornor has been a farmer, real estate ; I dealer, commercial traveler, congress ! man and governor. Charles W. Stewart. Raleigh. X. C.. ! and his son. Homer, under sentence | i of death in the electric chair at the j state prison, have made a complete ; confession to the murder of two pro hibition officers for which they are to 1 pay the death penalty. Walter Biskup. 15. was awarded six thousand dollars damages by Circuit Judge I.anwher at St. Louis. Mo., for impaired sight in his right eye sus tained when struck by a ball on a suburban golf links July 4. 1922, while he. was caddy ing. An X-rav photograph of a human hand was transmitted by telephone, wire from Xew York to Chicago in seven minutes and arrived back in Xew York by mail nine hours and sev en minutes after it was received in j Chicago." One hundred and forty University of Michigan students are given their | blood in transfusions to help pay i their way through college. Dr. John L. Garvey, resident physician of tlu* university, recently told Ann Arbor J newspaper reporters. Detroit newspapers announce that ! Mrs. John F. Dodge, widow of one of the founders of Dodge Brothers. Inc., 1 will be married shortly to Alfred G. Wilson, Detroit lumber dealer. David Jones, 25. negro, fell from the fifth story of a Richmond, Ya., hotel, landed on his head, suffered a frac tured skull and physicians say, he will live. The Ixjs Angeles motor ship, Kath erine R.. is reported in distress and 1 drifting helplessly, with her cargo of j fruit. SOD miles south of San Pedro. ' Calif., somewhere off Cape San Du cas. Prince Youssoupoff. head of an erst while royal family , of the old regime in Russia, still hopes to recover his vast estates, before the revolution es timated to be worth three hundred : and fifty million dollars, although they are now held by the Bolsheviks, he testified at the second day of trial in the Xew York supreme court of his suit against Joseph E. Widener of Philadelphia for recovery of two Rem brandt portraits. For the second time within the brief space of less than three months vio- ! lent death visited the bench of the Vir- 1 ginia supreme court of appeals when j Judge Joseph L. Kelly was found dy ing in the basement of . his home at Bristol. Ya. A shotgun was the agency of death in both instances. The federal grand jury at Cape Gir ardeau. Mo., has returned indictments ; against ten Ripley county residents on charges of using the mails to de fraud in employment of a "serum" to produce swelling and discolorations ! of the flesh to substantiate fake per- ; sonal injury claims. Bonds were fix- j ed at ten thousand dollars each. The iron hood of the electric chair may close oh Gene Purdy, the young j Tulsa. Okla.. church deacon, whose j trial, for the killing of E. S. Huchison, a wealthy lumber man whom he ac- I cused of stealing his wife's love, has ; gone to the jury. A high wind and electric storm, ac- | fompanied by a heavy downpour of rain, caused two deaths, wrecked a ! partly completed factory building and ; snapped off numerous telephone poles j in Berrien county. Michigan. Two men were killed when they came in contact with a high tension wire that had been blown down. Three earth shocks recently visited Calexico. Calif., between the hours of 7:30 and f:20 o'clock at night, shak ing the plaster from the walls of the public library and frightening scores of inhabitants into the streets, but no serious damage or injury is reported. Kenneth Wagner, alleged slayer of Policeman John Smith of Kingsport. Ya.. and Deputy Sheriff Hubert Webb of Bluff City. Ya.. who were shot and killed at Kingsport, was apprehended and is in the Blountville, Tenn., city Jail, authorities at Bristol, Va., have been notified by telephone. Find Relics of Prehistoric Race Tennessee Latest to Yield Treasures of Historic Value. Chattanooga. ? Whs the genus homo cradled in the heart of the Cumber land mountains in eastern Tennessee? This is the startling question which areheologists may begin to ask them selves following the discovery by IV E. Cox, state geologist of Tennessee, of evidence which he thinks inay estab lish Pickett county, Tennessee, as the "cradle of mankind." Professor Cox's research seems at least to establish that here in the heart of the Cumberland mountains was many thousand years ago \a human | community which had emerged into i tribal consciousness, but had by no means made the racial progress attrib uted to the famous Soultre men of France. The discovery was lirst made known to the Tennessee a.rcheological experts about the middle of January, and Pro fessor Cox and his assistants have just completed an investigation. Among other things they have found hieroglyphics of human figures, cut in the "sandstone that are probably thousands of years old, and graves which indicate many prehistoric bur ial customs," at this colony between the Wolf and obed rivers in Pickett county. Tennessee. Professor Cox has discussed his find thus: "Much has been written as a result of areheological exploration in Europe, tending t ? ? establish Europe as the most ancient home of man. Practically all of the; , evidences on which this; tlieorj is based lias been procured from caverns in France, Germany, Austria and Belgium. "Evidence, it is believed, of an enunl antiquity of man, has. within the first weeks of January, 1 ! been discov ered by the department of archeology. A survey was made during the week ending January !?, of the caverns, mounds and evidences of habitations along the Wolf and obed rivers. Discovery of Ancient Rock. "In Pickett county, within tlie first weeks of January, a.t an elevation of approximately 1.0O0 feet, there was dis covered an enormous round set rock about 40 feet in diameter, so located that an unobstructed view for miles, even to the lofty range of the Cumber land mountains, is presented; about PKJ feet below this Stone is a beautiful battlement; On the north side of this stone are three manmade holes, round and symmetrical. .r> inches in diameter, about - feet apart, cut to a depth of IS to 24 inches; on the edges around this stone are thirty smaller holes of lesser depth; on the face of the stone are twelve pits or. ovens of an average di ameter of 2 feet, about (> inches In depth, all of which have been burned; on each of the sides of this stone are ancient arrow designs pointing to the north, south', east and west ; there are also inscribed thereon ancient single I line human figured designs and lines Indicating counters ; these counter lines do not exceed ten in one group; this ancient stone monument is almost cov ered with these ancient markings, which appear , on removing the moss growing and attached to the stone. "The exposed portion of this stone is approximately lit feet thick, and inline? : dlately under iis shelf burned human i bones were discovered.'; this stone is apparently the southern exposed edge of the cliff, below which, about 800 feet, Obei river ! ows. the cliff being almost perpendicular; this stone is ex posed on both the east and west, there being a narrow point extending toward the southeast, the area immediately on ?the summit covered by this entire stone, some of which is not exposed, is about three acres. A lirrrled ex- j animation disclosed several hundred j pits cut in the stone varying from 1 to 4 feet in diameter and from G to 10 inches deep; numbers of these pits have connecting conduits cut in the! rock; most of all the pits show the.' effect of lire therein. "At the extreme south point of the | cliff and about -0 feet below the sum-! mit there was found the entrance to a large cavern; at about 1"? feet from j the entrance two avenues or passage ways appear, leading into two. separate I p? ? ? ?? chambers; the interior is perfectly dry and the floors are covered with ashes, which had not been opened more than 2 feet ; human skeleton matter, Hint implements, pottery and Imrned human and animals bones were found Iii this ash. Many Skeletons Found. "A man who assisted in this ex ploration said that a great number of human, skeletons were found ; that the entrance was closed by stones set in place, which lie assisted to remove; the cavern walls show evidences of lire; <>n returning from the entrance to the cavern, to the monumental scene, an ancient single line arrow was found, the pointer of which was directly to the cavern; on observing oil" the monumental stone a single line arrow pointing toward the northwest, we followed this lead, and at a dis tance of about f>00 feet discovered an entrance to another cavern, the en trance closed by stones which had been placed. Not being equipped to remove the large entrance stone, no examin ation was made of the interior of this cavern. . "All of these pits are cut in a sand stone rock, evidently becati.se this stone withstands tire action; the great er part of the stone in this section is white and blue limestone, but the an cients selected this law arec. of a sandstone surface to utilize the pit s, a -treat number of which contained ash and charcoal. These pits were evident ly used either for ceremonial and sac riticial purposes or for communal conk ing purposes. "This monumental site was most probably used for ages as the home of the ruler, who no doubt occupied as his home the large Hat monumental stone, the holes therein being used to erect therein the standards or insignia of authority. "Many ages ago, no doubt, this stone, now almost covered with ancient pic- j tographs, was the scene of the weird and primeval ceremonies of a people whose antiquity is probably equal, if not superior, to that of :>n.v pre historic Kuropean people. The writer has been unable to find any record of there having been found, in any part of the world, such quantities of pits or ovens Cut by human hands and when J the monumental stone and burial caves are found in the immediate vicinity, | there is at least established long oc cupancy by a large population, and. the: custom of using caverns for burial pur poses, as well as the fact of closing ; t he cavern entrance. Huge Cavern. "Located a short distance to the northeast of the above described site is a cavern having an opening of more than 11(H) feet across, above which, at a . height of about 1<H> feet is t lie nat ural stone roof; thousands (if tons of rock have fallen on the dry floor, and beneath these fallen stones is a floor of ashes from three to. six feet deepij excavations disclosed hearths, ash and charcoal commingled with burned anil unburned human and animal hones, flint ami bone implements, broken pot tery; the area of this ash is approxi mately two acres under the shelving rock and outside the darkness ot the cavern ; no: exploration of the interior was made, "l-'roin enormous fallen stones twen ty-nine skeletons have been removed from stone graves; a great quantity of Hint, bone and stone implements were found, as well as thousands of bone and shell beads. None of the skeletal remains were preserved by the excava tor, so it was ncit possible to acquire any knowledge as to the. crania or other peculiarities. Across the gulch from this entrance is a large rock shel ter, the floor covered with ash and evidences of lire. The roof and sides of the covern bear evidence of long use of -fire, and the. slight excavations, clearly establish human occupancy. "No Careful excavations have been j made to discover animal skeletal re mains, which would tend to fix chro nology by the fauna. "lletween the two described sites on the summit of a high lull washed by Obed river is a summit deposit of lime stone shelving rock about ojie mile in length. A hurried examination dis closed great quantities of ash with which is* found burned and unburned human bones, broken in small pieces. COCONUT KING GIVES $2,500,000 FOR HUMANITY a--.. - _ " ? _? ? Plans to Train Youths and Start Them in Business ? Gives to Employees. New York. ? Leopold Schepp, known ns the "coconut king," i>:ts set asfde $'-.">00,000 of his fortune to carry out philanthropic plans for t lie "better ment of humanity," it became known here. 1'art of. his fortune will be used to establish a foundation for the 'ben efit of worthy boys of New York, he announced. Air. Schepp recently distributed ;2I!, 900 to the employees of his drill. The employees, old and young, received j;ifts of from $500 to '"-,000 each. Two years ago lie made a similar distribu tion of J51 10,000. He subsequently es tablished a pension system by which the beneficiaries, including servants in his home, receive monthly checks which aggregate thousands of dollars. He plans, by his foundation for the benefit of hoys in New York, to launch youths in a life of usefulness, if they prove worthy alter a probation of two years. Youths between the a .ires of thirteen and sixteen years, of what ever creed or nationality, will be eli gible. Each will be required to sign ! a pledge for two years, which will i include abstinence from liquor. If the youth lives up to his pledge, he will receive $200 and be started in any business or calling that he selects. The foundation will be governed by a group of directors. "1 expect to gel these boys," said Air. Sciiepp, "by writing to the min isters of churches and Sunday school superintendents. It will be an associ ation of endea-orers. They must be of good health, physically and mentally, so as to grow into the best kind of young men. It will be nonsectarian. "1 hope to set an example for other employers and capitalists who may wish to do something with their sur HIS NAME SHORTEST * Mr. I. whose home is in llangchow, ('hina, and who is :i senior :il Ihe Johns Hopkins medical school, h sis I the world's shortest niiiiie, ;is it is | composed of hut one letter si n< I that i i letter displaces less ink than any oth er in the alphabet. Mr. I'ao Chun I. i who pronounces his surname "K," is twenty-four yejirs old. j along with Hint and polterv fragments; | long use of lire is indicated on the j sides and roof of the shelves; numbers | of human skeletons have been taken from this site along with perfect {lot tery. in many cases the urns being tilled with heads made of shell and hones; in some instances thousands of these heads are broken in two pieces, a condition not heretofore found east ? if the Mississippi. Bodies Wrapped in Skin. "In this district ami beneath the I , shelving rocks, it is reported, there was discovered and removed from the ash beds the remains of a human be in^' carefully wrapped in the skin of a fur-hearing animal, which was placed ' beneath mattresses made of cane in terwoven. The body had been clothed with a garment made of threads, which : threads were made of the inner bark j .if trees and, woven with the fiber, bird J feathers were found. This burial meth od, and particularly (lie custom of weaving bird feathers in the thread, Is recognized as .being used among many prehistoric races in different parts of the world; the chronology of which Is reasonably well established. ? "It is evident that thpse people prac ticed the custom of removing the flesh from the bones of their dead ; probably burned the bones and then they were piled In the caverns and, after having placed in an urn or some receptacle food for the spirit on its journey to ! the tinal home, sealed with stone the entrance to. the cavern, thus 'indicating I t lie belief of an existence beyond this ; life. "Along the valley of Obed river are numerous earth mounds, similar in ap pearance to those of the middle basin of Tennessee, carrying evidences ? if j ' agriculture. "The marked difference between the cave dwellers and the mound occu pants is the absence of any evidence of Jigricultural pursuits by the cave \ dwellers. "Central and South America are he ing deligently explored in the effort tn tind the evidence of the cradle of civili ! /.at (on. Europe, Asia. Australia. Af j rica and the islands of (he seas are j being examined and explored for a like 1 I purpose. j "Within the confines of Tennessee i are know evidences of human occu i pa.ncy and utilization by prehistoric ! man, at a date when he existed by the fruits of the chase long prior to the : advent of the raves that followed agri I .cultural pursuits."? New York Ilerab: and Tribune. Colored Roads Urged to Save Drivers' Eyes London. ? The gray or white surface roads, of England, at which the in creasing number of automobile driv- , ei\s are compelled to gaze intently in j guiding their speeding cars, are caus i iutr a .uass < ? minor eye troubles, ac j coring to Arthur .Upson in a recent ' ! address before the institute of Opti | ciai s. White roads reflect the hartnfu' i actinic rays, and M r; I'pson recom mends that road builders mix green coloring niat'er with their surfacing j material. plus money before 'hey die and while they can better judge where it will , do most good. I wish that 1 had started tho work long ago." He said plans for establishment of the foundation now are in the hands' of his lawyers. ? Old Vienna Bell Is Now Operated by Electricity Vienna. ? After f>0 years of silence, "I lie growler," ihe great bell, weigh- | ing 21 tons, which hangs in t he tower j of St. Stephen's church, is again in use. i Kinging of the hell was discontinued j half a century ago because it was ! feared the swinging of the huge mass j would bring down t he tower. An elec- ! trie striking apparatus which enables it to be sounded without danger, now has been installed. While the tone of t he beli in the vicinity of the church is but a rumble, its notes at a distance of live miles sound clear and musical. Everything in existence deteriorate* ??? ??? ! i i CHILD'S BEST LAXATIVE | IS CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP # ? ?/ / IIUKItY MOTIIKR! A ton spoon fill of "California I' if Syrup" nmr will thoroughly Hean tin- little howrls iiri'l in a few hours you hav?? a \wll, play ful ehihl ajzain. Kvon if cross. fever ish, bilious, < unsi i | f < ?() iii ? full ? ?f <ol?l, children love iis |>l?-iis;int taste. Tell your ilru::trist you want only the penuino "? 'alifornin I'iir Syruji" which lias (Iirt-riinns for haliies an<] children of all aires prim ?-?l on liv.nle. Mother, you must say "California." f{efu>e any imitations. Cuticura Soap and x'Ointment Keep (he Scalp Clean anri Healthy Promote Hair Growth Fewer Left-Handed Women Prof. .[tint- K I Tn-y of the I'ni versiiy "f Wyuiiiiiiv after -tmhinu t h? refill IS of 111" ? - \ ; 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 ; 1 1 i ? > 1 1 of I' ? Itieli iltl'l WIHlli-n. ?r|ei !i-i| !|-..||l f III- ,\l!i?-ri i-Jitl I's.Vi-lnil.'L'i' :il - ? . ? - 1 ? ? I \ . Ii:is Iiilm* I ' ? the H- j ?? rs that li'Ucr \\ ? ? 1 1 1 ? ? 1 1 are left-handed liiati men : 1 1 1 ? I that tin; iiNil>i(|i'\ti'!'<>iiv i-in-- superior in telligence. I iint < rn 'Xe, tin- ?li>-i in< ? ii<>n I it t w ecu lft'i nii'l ritrhi is nor n?*:? rl \ s>i -irniu in n i? i people us their so Use !?' i.p :>!??) i|ow 11. WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT ^Thousands <*f women have kidney and bladder t r< .ill .J<- and never suspect it. Women's lonip'amt* often prove to I ??* nothing ??is** l iit ki<ln<\ trouble, or the result of kidney or Madder di-easr. If tiii' kidne-. - art1 lint in a ln-.?lt hy condition. tley may cause the otiier or pans to lieeome diseased. Pain in the link, headaehe. lo*s of am bition. rHTvon-ne-s. are often times symp toms of kidm-v trouble. Don't ili lay starting treatment. I)r Kilmer's Swamp-Hoot, a phy-ieian's pre seription. obtained at any drug store, may lie just tin- remedy neeileil to over eiinir such eonilit ions. (let a nieiliiim or large si/e bottlo immediately from any drug store. However, if you wish lirst to te^f this preat preparation send ten cents to I)r. Kilmer & Co.. limghamton. X. V.. for a sample liottle. When writing lie sure and mention this paper. Midget Parisian Taxis Tin- st reels of Paris, France, now nre swsi rmi ti^ with miiiiiiture one pus sender taxis. compact mid lisrht. .mil exceedingly economical in tires, ;;asn line eoii-iinipiioii and eo<i of maim failure. The* have a wheel truck of only u; inches. Popular S'i?-nee Monthly. For 78 Years Han ford's Hal-am of Myrrh has lieen a household remedy. Proved its merits with out advertising. 3 size?: all stores.? Adv. Sun Baths as You Stroll Sun lutlis while yoii walk down tin Street al'e |ai>si;.|e a- the I'eslllt of tile i]eve|o|iinetit oi a new Hritish fabrb . It looks and tieis like silk. I ? 1 1 1 allows l In* ultra-violet ra>s of tin- -in:, so lienetii-ial to health, to pa>>. I Ih'oiil'Ii it. Pr. Pcery's "P<*.i<l Shot" not enty ejprls Worms or Tapeworm hut cleans "Ut the ir.u? us in which th<-y l*r?*?-d anil tnnP!< up tli? dlgesticn. I'm- ili -si* tlni-.s It, A ( ! v Unrestrained 'Hie Woai.-in "111 the hatlle -of tont'lies v. etnati ean hold her own." The Man "Vis: Imt why i|or?.n't -In'-;" Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ouicnctici Bell-ans 25$ AND 75$ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE PARKER'S Hair balsam Removes DarulrulT Stops Hair t allinf Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair wV anil |1 00 at DruuK^tM Hfacox t*h?-in Wka , I'atchogvu'.N Y f HINDERCORNS Removes Corns. Cal louses. etc., 6tops all pain, ensures comfort to tlm feet, uiakrs walking easy. 15c by mail or at l>rug* gikti. lliscox Cbeiaical Works. Patchogue, N. V. SAYS PILES ALL GONE AND NO MORE ECZEMA "I had eczema for many years on my head and could not get anything to stop the agony, j saw your ad and got one box of Peterson's Ointment and I owe you many thanks for the good it has done me. There isn't a blotch on my head now and I couldn't help but thank Peterson, for the cure Is great."? Miss Mary Hill, ?420 Third Avenue, Pittsburgh. Pa. "I have had itching piles for 15 years and Peterson's Is the only ointment that relieves me: besides, the piles seem to have gone." ? A. B. Ituger. 1127 Washington Avenue. Racine, Wis. Use Peterson's Ointment for old sores, salt rheum, chafing and all skin diseases. 35 cents. Druggists recom mend It. Mall orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
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April 23, 1925, edition 1
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