Newspapers / Polk County News and … / Sept. 27, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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r- . - - Three Cents the Copy. INDEPENDENCE IN ALL THINGS. Subscription Price; $1.00 Per Year in Advance. VOL XII. , CQLUMBUb, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1906. NO, 22, 7 , rlV v' KE Bill IS ATLAHIA Races Clash and Many Persons Arc Killed and Wounded CITY PLACED UNDEJt MILITARY "When, About 10 O'clock, a Negro Shoved a White Woman From ths Sidewalk the Mob Let Itself Loose Upon the Entire Colored Popula ticn Every Incoming Car Was Scanned for Negroes, Who Were Beaten, Cut and Stamped Upon Streets, in . One Section Cleared by Tire Department Negro Women the Most Warlike, Fighting Like Amazons. , Atlanta, (la., Speeial. A race war ,!' alarming", proportions begun here Saturday nigiit. Through the night it raged with varying vigor, and wtn morning dawned it found th- down town streets in possession of fi!t companies, of the Fifth Georgia Tuwntry, with a battery of light ar tillery in reserve. Through the day Iiu!e of . importance has occurred. The police claimed, with the aid of tin military, to have the situation iiii lpr control. This condition came as the result of nutmeroas and repeated assaults r attempted assaults upon white women by negroes. The list of an even dozen of such assaults, within tin- limits of Fulton county within the last nine weeks, came Saturday when four attempts at assault were reported; v Klaring. headlines in the special editions of afternoon papers wrought the populace to a high pitch f excitement. The, usual Saturday night erowds were largely increased hy men and boys who thronged the down-town -streets.. There was no leader and no overt act until late in 1 he. .evening. '" AtJanta, ... Ga., Special. Twenty four hours have passed since a race war of no mean" proportions began in Atlanta.j n kat period t least ten lives hare been sacrificed, and the liuirrbcr of injured will be at least 40, several pf whom cannot recover. At 10 o'clock Sunday night the city wa3 controlled by" the police" aided by nearly a thousand of the State mili tia. Every part of the town is pat- . roiled by the soldiers- and the authori ties seem to have the situation well in hand. Governor .Terrell, who or dered; seven companies of the State inilitaijy service from points outside of Atlanta to aid the eight local comr panics, stands ready to declare the city under martial law, if . the scenes of Saturday night are repeated. He has declared -within an hour that he .fees no necessity at present to take ilifse extreme measures. Numerous and persistent rumors are reaching the city of negroes at tacking white . persons and stoning street ?are in the suburbs and out skirts of the city. Most of these ve lorts doubtless are false, but several I i-eot cars arriving from ; their.- runs show broken windows, Avhile - their rows are refusing to go out. The larger, part of the military is concentrated in the downtown dis t riefc. Marietta and Decatur streets, both frequented by negroes, are t i uwded with white men. The troops are marching through these crowds, constantly;, trying to enforce the or der, of the mayor that the streets shall be cleared. The efforts to clear the streets, however, so far seem to he meeting with only fair success. ..Very few of the better class of citir zeus who are not called out by neces-. ity are on the streets. ' ; Up to Sunday evening more than 0 arrests have been made of mem hers of Saturday night's mob, charg ing incitement to riot. Five hundred dollars " bond has been required in ouch case. - - No names of pronfinence are found !i this list. Of the dead it is impossible to get t he names. Only partial lists have K-en prepared and no two of these :iree. ' ' . ' -. Explosion Followed Insnlt. At about 10 o'clock' a negro man shovtMl a white woman from the side walk on -Whitehall -street, in the cen ter of town. Almost simultaneously negro wojnan made ail insulting remark to a white man on an adjoin ing street and he administered what ho considered due punishment. From this start the excited -crowd, tf whioh had become a.mab, began its-work f destruction. Five thousand men and boys thronged the down-town streets looking,-for' negroes. .- A onas-j meeting of representative c itizens, including the govenor of the sate, the " mayor of the city and nniivhers of--leading business men, was held (Sunday evening, and the action -'f the mob was denounced in vigor vu's terms., 8 Items of Interest From Many Parts of the State MINOR MATTERS OF STATE NEWS Happenings' of More or Less Import ' &nce ToM in Paragraphs The Cot ton Markets. Charlotte Cotton Market. These prices represent the prices quoted to wagons: - Good middling. v;:r:v .. .....9.35 Strict middling.... .. .. 9.35 Middling. . . . ...... . . . . . .9.25, Good middling, tinged .... . . . .8 7-S Stains ...... . . 7 1-28 1-2 General Cotton Market. Galveston, firm. . . ... . .9 7-10 New Orleans, steady. . . . . .95-16 Mobile, steady .... .... .... 9 3-16 Savannah, easy.. . . . . . .9 3-16 Charleston, firm ..... .9 l-S. Wilmington, steady. ... ... .0 3-16 Norfolk, steady . . ' . . . . . ; . .0 7-1G Baltimore, nominal. . . . . . .9 1-2 New York, quiet ... . . .. ..9.75 Boston, quiet . . . . ...... . .9.75 Philadelphia, quiet.. .. .. .. ..10 Houtson, steady. ... . . ... .9 3-S Augusta,' steady. .'. . .. ......91-2 Memphis, steady . . .... .... 9 5-S St. Louis, quiet ..9 5-S Louisville, finn .... ... 101-4 Charlotte Produce Market. Chickens Spring. . ... .. ,.1225 Hens per head; . . . . . .35 Ducks . . .. 25 Eggs .... . . . . . . . .2 L(a 22 Rye.. . . . . . . . ,. . ,..,.8(1 Baltimore Produce Market. Baltimore, Sept. 24. Flour qnict and steady, unchanged. Wheat. firmer; spot contract 71 3-4 to 71 7-8; Southern 58 to 67. Corn firmer; spot 54 3-4 to 54 7-S; Southern white 55 1-2 to 56 1-2. Oats firmer; No. 2, mixed 36 to 36 1-2. Rye firmer, No. 2, Western 66 to 67. Butter steady and unchanged; fan cy imitation 20 to 21 ; do creamery 25 to 26 ; do ladle 18 to 20 ; store packed 16 to 17. , .Eggs firm 24. Cheese active and unchanged 12 3-4 to 13 1-4. Sugar steady, unchanged. A Heavy Loser. Wilmington, Special. The United States government is the heaviest loser because of the recent gerat storm on the coast. The breakwater erected just below the present site of Fort Caswell, about fifteen miles below Wilmington, some years ago has received damages from the effects of the storm that vill amount to from $100,000 to $125,000. The break, water which is about three and a quarter miles long is composed of the new inlet dam and the Swash De fence Dam, the former built to close an inlet which broke through the beach some , years ago. and the latter to pi'otect the beach from the con stant swash of . the waves beating upon it. These dams are built of rocks with some f copings and they are from thirty to . forty feet high. The stone copipg of the hew inlet dam formed of granite, blocks, weigh ing from three to six tons each, was turned entirely over and the major ity of the heavy blocks were thrown from thirty to fifty feet from their Original foundation1 by the mighty force of wind and wave; It seems almost impossible that such could be but it is neverthless true. Some of the blocks were thrown so far by the tcrrifiic gale that , no effort will be made to use them when the work of repairing the bieakwater is begnn. The damage resulting from the loss of this stone top will alone amount to $50,000. ; North State Items: . A charter is granted the Charlotte I Music Company, W. Ames and others stockholders, capital stock $1U,UUU. The corporation commission has heard one of the complaints of discrimination- in tlephone rental at Raleigh, the company answering that it had adjusted all these matters and that there was no further ground for complaint. The Raleigh & Pamlico -Sound Railway has arranged to haul cotton and tobacco, into Raleigh. It" travers es a very fine (country..-. As yet' the track is not inj jcondition to permit passenger traffic. The owners of the road are not only very wealthy and progressive men but they' are careful as well and so are the officials. This road will open a new territory to Ral eigh, and it is certainly extremely im portant. The leaf tobacco market here is .being pushed with vigor, and the citizens and the chamber of com merce are aiding it very materially. The three negro normal schools at Fayetteville opened Monday. 1 BABY ALIVE FIVE DAYS j BESIDE DEAD.. MOTHER Found Gasping Near Body When Door Was Broken Open. INFANT BRAVELY FIGHTS DEATH Mrs. Catherine Denham, a Tjone Woman and a Fourteen-Months-Olrt Foundling Discovered, in Brooklyn After Many Days. Brooklyn, N. Y. -Struggling for life with all the resoluteness ' of a prehistoric -child and with the intelli gence of a civilized one, John Boyle, fourteen months old, through five terrible days kept himself from deaththough alone in a little-flat in No. 4201 Third avenue, with the body of Mrs. Catherine Denham, his moth er by adoption He was found there by the dead woman's aunt, who, ob taining no answer to repeated calls, got a patrolman to break in the dDor of the flat for her. Mrs. Denham'sr body lay in the middle of the kitchen 1 floor, close to the stove. Apparently, she had died of heart" disease when about to light the fire five days be fore, for in her stiffened fingers a match was clutched, and the Coronr and ambulance surgeon said she had been dead at least that long. Beside the body little John was close to his last hour. He had eaten everything, his strong young jaws could nibble,' edible or inedible, and had come to the end of his strength. Yet so great wm his vitality, medical men said he would pull through. Little John's tongue was black and swollen with thirst when they found' him. His voice had dwindled to a gasping whisper. One would rliayey said his eyes were falling out of his neau. uie once rosy cheeks were sunken. His wrists and ankle! had gone down to nothing. From top to toe he was as emaciated as children in the horror pictures of Indian fam-. ines. The fatal bloating of the stom ach from, prolonged starvation had not occurred, but it would have hap pened in a day or two had the child survived his experience that much -longer. - - : - 4- Guessing was all Mrs. Denham's sister, the policeman and the doctors - could do when they gazed ahput the tiny flat and tried to imagine what had taken place there. It was enough. On all sides were strewn crusts the baby had gnawed until they became too hard even for his rare pluck to conquer. He had broken a milk bot tle to get at the -.contents -at any rate, he had dragged the bottle off a low table aud evidently had lapped up the milk off the floor when the glass was shivered. How he avoided swallowing splinters from the bottle wa3 a mystery, yet the physicians found no symptoms that he had done so. The little chap, not old enough to toddle stoutly, nevertheless had swept the bottom shelf of the pantry bare in a hunt for food, and a chair placed near showed that the baby must have tried to climb up to reach the higher ones. A small pail which had contained laid was empty, licked smpty by the starving baby, the neighbors believed. He had; eaten flour from a broken bag until the agony of thirst made him stop. . Enough, injurious substances went Into that small stomach to kill an or dinary child. Physicians said a Fifth avenue baby would have succumbed In two days. Little John, beiag a waif Mrs. Denham had adopted him from the Guardian Angel Home, Twelfth avenue and Sixty-fifth street fought it out for five. Instinct-led him to food as long as there was any to be had. When there was no more, tie gnawed a little cloth horse stuffed with sawdust guawed it until his sharp little teeth worked through the cloth,, and doubtless he swallowed a ?ood deal of the stuffing. .A rubber teething ring, was found beside him, tnawed to shreds. v Small John evidently slept where jleep overtook him. There were signs that he had inhabited each of tire three rooms. Fortunately, he was too -young to think. A -child a few ears older, if not clever enough to inlock the door, might have died of fright at being shut In with a corpse. The baby had pulled at the old wom in's hair Mrs. Denham was close to' jixty years and tugged at her dress ng sack in efforts to arouse her from ;he sleep of death. Falling- that, he aerhaps ce'ased to notice the body. Yet whether by chance orinstinct he had fallen beside it when at last lis little legs gave way under him, ind his hand, shrunk to the seeming f a bird's claw,, was stretched toward , ;he dead woman. - Neighbors said they d! not recall searing the baby's cries. They hard ly noticed the f act thaCMrs. Denham svas not in evidence in- the first few lays, and when at last they did, they issumed she had gone away on a isit. - -:V:;. - - i Mrs. Denham became lonesome a husband. William real " , t .Denham, a civil engineer-, died. from the sisters of the Home of the Guardian Angel she obtained an omhan. In such a case a foster mother is allowed $8 a month for.the -are of the child, and this she accept--d as her husband's death had left 'her Impoverished, jonnmr oujo w itfr Tri Mrs. John Boyle,. friad.died within a few weeks ortach other soon alter tno aeam ul Denham, and he had been ihe home only-a month when Mrs. Denv Ham adopted him. u-- HYIIllTE - A'IRECKEO TE1E8SEE TOWN Half of JeUico Wiped Out as if Swept by a Cyclone. BODIES BURIED IN THE RUINS Exploding Car Kills Twelve v arid In jures More Tlian SOO -Damage to Property Estimated at a . Mil lion Dollars. Knoxville, Tenn. The town of Jel lico, which lies .partly in - Tennessee nd .partly in Kentucky, was all but wiped off the map at 8 o'clock a. m. by the explosion of a carload of dyna miter -.'.". ' ; At least twelve persons are dead, fifty are seriously injured and more than 150 are slightly injured. The property loss will exceed 000,000, nearly 1000 people are homeless and practically every busi ness house 'and factory in the town was demolished. A great hole, fifty feet deep and j 100 feet across, marks the spot where the railroad car which contained the 420 cases of dynamite stood. Buildings a mile away from the ex plosion; were shaken and some were demolished. The dead may reach twenty-five. The '"telegraph offices were de stroyed, and but for the fact that the long distance telephone office was far from the explosion, the town would have been completely shut off Troni the outside world. The news was telephoned to this city, within ten minutes after the ex plosion, which was heard for forty miles, and a special train with a score of physicians and newspaper men made a quick run to the scene. Relief was also sent from nearby towns. . Th3 work of rescuing victims bur ied under fallen buildings was begun at once.' Flyii.3 debris, pieces of timber and iron, seem to have been most disastrous to life and limb, a number of those killed being distant from the, scene of the explosion. ; Thvcar of dynamite was" standing ,ia.- a Louisville and Nashville Rail way siding, having just arrived; con signed to John L. O'Connor, a rail road' contractor, at ; Clearfield, Ky. Cars were being switched, and a car. loaded with pig iron was backed into the dynamite , car, causing the ex plosion. While this is the story generally believed, the official report sent out by the Southern rtailway officials says that several men were shooting at a target fastened to the dynamite car, and that the bullets set off the dyna mite. The list of "known dead comprises George Atkins, thirty years old, line man for the East Tennessee Tele phone Company; John Cook, fifty fears old, car inspector for the South srn Railway; Walt sr Rodgers, twenty-eight yea- old, clerk for the United Cold Storage Warehouse, cut to pieces and almost unrecognizable, and John Lrordon, colored, thirty years old. Five other dead bodies have been found, but they are so badly dis figured that they cannot be identified. The Armour Packing Company's warehouse, the Jung Brewing Com pany's warehouse, the Pinnacle brew ing omnany's warehouse, the Ken tucky Consumers' Oil Company's tanks and warehouse the Standard Oil Company's warehouse and the H. T. Hackney Company's grocery wareT house were completely demolished. Twenty-five other business houses on the Kentucky sidewere so badly dam aged that thiy will have to be re built. M ' , On theATennessee side, which in cludes tharger part of the town, the damage 'was more extended. "Business blouses' wore badly I.i3 figured and the stocks ' of good3 ruined while residences suffered se verely, win lows and doors being blown out in houses a mile away. ROBERT- It. HITT DEAD. End Conies at Summer Home at Nar ragansett Pier. Narragansett Pier, R. I. Con gressman Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois, died at hi3 summer home here. Heart failure following a long period of increasing physical weakness was the final cause of death. ; Mrs. Hitt and two sons, W. S. Hitt and R, H. Hitt, were at the bedside. When Congressman Hitt, accompa nied by his wife, arrived at Kinney Lodge, their summer home here, in June, it was -understood .that the Congressman was not in good health, V Robert Roberts Hitt, for many years a .Representative from Illinois, was born at Urbana, Ohio, January 16, 1834. He was the second son of the Rev. Thomas S. Hitt. When he was three years old the family moved to Mount Morris; '111.. whch place was his home for the remainder of his life. He had been chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Af fairs for many years. He was a friend of many Presidents and for forty-five years helped to shape the policy of thi3 country, especially in foreign affairs He started as a re porter and made 1 stenographic rec ords of the Lincoln-Douglass debates. Direct Wire For President. Direct communication wa3 estab lished by wire between Oyster Bay and Havana.' SCOTCH EXPRESS WRECKED Crowded Special Jumps the Track at Grantnam Curve.) Flj'iJiR Midnight Train Daslics Over Kmbaukme nt Coaches Burst Into riamcs All England Shocked. .. London. Just getting oyer the shock of the terrible railroad catas trophe at Salisbury, England was horrified to read thaf the crowded Scotch express train on the Great Northern Railway, from London, was wrecked at midnight outside of Grantham, a, railroad junction twenty-three miles southwest of Lincoln. The train ; should have stopped at Grantham, but failed to do so. Shortly after passing the station the train left the rails and jumped a bridge. The engine and several coaches were dashed over the em bankment, the engine turning turtle. Several coaches Immediately took fire. There are many passenger's be neath the debris. Of ten extricated, iive have died. The number of lives lost is not known, but is believed to be large. Many were injured. , The coaches caught fire and the fire brigade was called out. - At the spot wh,erp the express was derailed there is a' curve, and it is supposed the brakes failed to act. The train appears to have gone up a siding, smashing the parapet of the bridge, which was completely shat tered. A later report states that the engi neer and fireman are dead under .the engine, that the superintendent of the mail car is missing and that seven injured persons have been taken to the hospital. At 5 o'clock a. m. it was officially stated that ten persons had been killed and sixteen injured. A dispatch from Grantham stated that the fire was well under control. TYPHOON DEATH LIST GROWS. Several Thousand May Have . Been Lost at Hongkong. Hongkong.-r-It is estimated that 5000 Chinese perished in tho ty phoon, many within short distance of the shore. The property losses are estimated at several millions of dol lars, i Only a few Europeans are missing. One launch that was cap sized had 130 Chinese on board.' They were all drowned. Over 1000 sampans and junks aro missing. - "when ths -typhoon started Bishop Joseph Chavles Hcare, of Victor's, was on his way to visit some neigh boring islands on the yacht Pioneer, which stranded in Castle Peak Bay. MVs. Hoare went in a Govern zient launch to search for her husband. The harbor is strewn with wreck age. The river steamer Fatshan drifted into collision with a French mail steame-. The entire Chinese crew climbed aboard the French" steamer and left Captain Thomas, who was injured, one officer and the engineers to navigate the Fatshan to Shelter Bay, where she was blown ashore. The people are incensed at the of ficers at the observatory for not re porting the approach of the typhoon, and an inquiry has been demanded. I? DIED UNDER X-RAYS. M. F. Murphy, Pennsylvania Ranker, is Strangely Stricken. Philadelphia. While undergoing an X-ray examination, - Martin F. Murphy, a banker of Renovo, this State, died suddenly. x Mr. Murphy was fifty-eight years old. He had developed what Was thought to be cancer of the throat and was sent to the Polyclinic Hos pital for. examination. He had been examined exhaustively before the rays were, turned upon him, and no organic weakness of any kind was found; ,, His body was bared to the waist and the rays were turned diag onally down upon him, striking the throat on the left side two inches be low the car and penetrating down ward toward , the right to a point of emergence belovk the eighth rib. At the - very moment the -rays were turned on Murphy he rolled from the chair. Death was instantaneous. DOWIE OUSTED, 1911 TO G. Voliva Made Zion City Overseer Heavy Vote by Women. Chicago. Wilbur Glen Voliva was chosen by the people of Zion City as their leader by the overwhelming vote of 1911 to 6 for his opponent, A. E. Bills. The election wa3 held un derthe direction. of Judge Landis of the United States District Court, who was asked some time ago to settle ; the controversy between John Alex ander Dowie, founder of the church, and Volirar as to who should have control, of Zion City. About half of the total vote was cast by the women of Zion City, who went to tho polls singing hymns and praying. Eight-Hour Law Extended. President Roosevelt extended tire eight-hour law to apply to all oublic work under the supervision of any department of the Government. This order from Oyster Bay, N. Y., affects more particularly work on river and harbor Improvements. . Oklahoma Land, Opened. y President. Roosevelt opened for set tlement 505,000 acres of fertile land in Oklahoma. A DANGEROUS PKAClICB. Burning Off Paint Makes Insurances ' . '"''.v- ..V:::v Void.".- - v . - . It seems that considerable danger . to property etlstg In the practice cT" burning off old paint before re-paiat -. lng.' The question has Ions been subject of debate in the technical Journals, and now" house-holders anCr the newspapers have begun to discuss It. Those of us who, with trembling , have watched the painters blow fiery blast from their lamps against! our houses, and have looked sadly c& the s'ot our painting bill becatts of the time wasted on this prelimta. ary work, are interested tn, the l ligation by the Greenfield' (Maw. B , Gasette and ; Courier, whlah girean considerable space to the reasons tmt the practice, questions, lta neessttxr and snggssts ways to prevent the rfear ot burning down one's house in ordtc to get the old paint off. It says: , . "Theres a good deal of dleensatoat among house-holders as to the dealr- ability in painting houses, of burnlngr off the old paint, a practice that hash grown rry common of late be Greenfield and elsewhere. Insurance men are strongly opposed , to . this, method. It makes void Insurance policies for fires caused in this man- ner. '"' Several houses ; in GreenfieldFi have gotten afire as the result of thf method, and in some places house , have burned as a result. "It is undoubtedly true that whexz a house has been painted orer asft Z over again there comes to be an ac cumulation of paint in bunches. 1ST. new paint is put on top of these ao ' cumulations It is almost sure to blisw ter. To burn it off is the quickest and cheapest and perhaps the surest method of getting rid of this old!, paint." : - The Gazette and Courier quotes certain old patrons, to the effect that; accumulations of paint are , unneces sary. These old-timers lay the blam partly on the painter who falls to brush his paint in well, partly on thet eustom of painting in damp weather or not allowing sufficient, time foit drying between coats, and partly tot the use of adulterated paints insteacT of old-fashioned linseed oil and pure white lead. Ihe paper says:- "Many -ot the older house-holdera say that if care is taken at all thesj J points, it is absolutely vunhecesalarjv; to have paint burned off. thsf 'ar' vise that people who have bpuses ' , painted should buy their own materi als, and to have them put on by titer day, so as to be sure to get good lead and oil. Qf jourw tfc$ bnrrii& ejf of paint gr'atly increases the costt of thi Job."; ;'; -v - " The trouble house-holde'r ererr- where hare with paint is pretty trelS summed up by our contemporary aa4 the causes are about the same erery J where. By far the most f reqnenti cause of the necessity for the danger ous practice of burning old paint to . tho use of poor material. The oil: should be r'ire linseed and the white lead should e real white lead. The latter Is moie often tampered witSf than the oil. Earthy substances, aodt pulverized rock and quartz, are fre quently used as cheapeners, to thes great detriment of the paint. Painters rarely adulterate white lead themselves and they very seldoca use ready prepared paints the most: frequent causes of paint trouble. But: they do often buy adulterated white lead because the property owner t fa ' slsts on a low pMce and the paintexr has to economise somewhere. Thai suggestion is therefore- a good one? -- that the property owner investigates the subject a little, And oat the name) of some reliable brand of white lead and see that the keg is marked witfit that brand. . ' - V- . The linseed oil Is snore difficult tor be sure of. as it is usually cold fa bulk when the quantity is small; bs& reliable makers of linseed oil can hex learned on inquiry and. If your dealer is reliable, you will get what, jew want. v; ', - V- -' ' "--h ' Pure white lead and linseed oil are) . so necessary to good paint that the , . little trouble necessary to get then well repays the house owner "in del lars and cents saved. : w . Strive to make the world betto TTNER'S DYSPEPSIA REJIEDXV Many Have Dyspepsia and Donfc. - "- " Know; It.' "j.'' , Do you belch up wind ? Taste yenur. food after eating? See specks before: your eyes ? Are ' yen ; pale and. hagganfrV Does your hearty flutter? Are yon dizzy? Do you ha to painfi. ' in side or ; back? Risings or pimples on " the skin? Are you low spirited? ; Is there av sour taste? Breath bad? HeadacheT, Weak kidneys? Bilious? Consti pated? . Are you nervous? If so. you have Dyspepsia, and it is a dangerous condition. To cure, take . Tyner'ei : Dyspepsia Remedy. It is made for just such . troubles and symptomai. Tyner's Dyspepsia ' Remedy- removes -acids from the stomach, strengthens . weak stomachs and cures, the worst ' Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Druggists or by express 50 cents abottle. Money refunded if it falls to cure. Medical advice and circular free by writing to Tyner Remedy Co., Augusta, Ga. , j
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 27, 1906, edition 1
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