THE GLEANER leaocD avBBY thubbdat. • J. D. KERNODLE, Editor. pf SI.OO A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. rbe editor will not be rwponatble for rtowieqpiWMd by oorreepondonu. loured st toe Voatofflee »t Graham. N. 0., a eeoood olsM matter. • ORAEAmTn. 0., March 4, 1920 REPUBLICAN CONVENTION. % The Republicans held their State V convention in Greenaboro yesterday. jm Before the meeting a fine prospect for a row was peeping over tbe , horizon. But the disaffected were i f appeaaed and upon the surface things K went off smoothly. I The permanent chairman of the cinvention waa C. A. Reynolds, who waa Lieut-Gov. daring the Dan Enaaell regime. Delegates at large to the National convention to be held in Chicago on June 28th were named aa follows : John M. Morehead, E. Carl Duncau, Marion Butler and Frank A. Linney, the aame old crowd which has been in control for years. Of couraa everything the Demo crate have done in all the past yeart waa severely condemned by botb reeolntiona -and the open (peaking. This Was expected. A Republican convention ia the last place in the world for a Democrat to go to to 100 l for comfort or commendation. A full ticket, as follows, was recom mended to be voted on in the Stat* primaries: U. 8. Senator, A. A. Whitener, Governor, John J. Parker, Lient.-Gov., Irvin Bj Tucker, Sec'y of Slate, Brownlow Jackson. Attorney-Gen., If. P. Sea well, » Treasurer, J. J. Jenkins, Commfssigner of Labor and Print) ' ing, James F. Barrett, Bopt. Education, Mrs. Mary Bettle Sharpe, Auditor, J. Ed. Mendenball, Com'rlns.. W. L. Stanton, Corp. Com'r., J. B. Mason, Sopreroe Court Justices, T. T. Hicks, J. F. Alexander. Wood'i Boon on the Rocks. Philadelphia Uecord. Mow that Congress has turnel P down the plan for universal mlll- V tsry training, why does Doe Wool remain in the fteld as a Presi dential aspirant? The only valid argument for his candidacy has p;b#an removed. The country has |||sjKVfied to successful soldiers after ptN wan, as tt did to Washington, '' Jackson, Taylor and Orant, be cause of their great achievements, but Genoral Wood has nothing of that kind to bis credit. The political expert* say that his cam paigner* have abandoned Pennsyl vania as a field for possible dele gates, and that his boom is on the rocks. It Is to be lipped this is true. The bluff has been kept up too long, and It is full time that someone exposed It. Southwest Alamance. Cor. of The U leaner. The flu patient# In our com munity are all improving and no new cases. The schools aud dhurctyea wtll raopen soon. Bftv. L. U. Weston's sermon #at very much enjoyed; hope to get another. , Mathias and the ground-hog am giriug us just what they promised, but in this caso it would have been better if they had not beon so honest in their deallugs. . With the high cost of living and people leaving the farms every day for public work Is making the fe/ few that are left wonder how t lie V country is to feed the cities. City prices for work aro so high farm ers cannot pay them and only eel 8 hours for a day. The farmer works 12 aud 14, ao there Is the problem. If more people don't work, the 11. C. L. will lie still higher. If the women ever org mite a separate political parly, the roll ing pin should be lut emblem. You can cork pk demljohu, but not a demagogue. When prices come down, will they slide down In graceful spirals or Will they come down like Uie deacon's one-horse shay? If Berkman and Qoldmau have to work twelve hours a day they will think they have beeu deport ed to Hades and not Kuaaia. The affairs of Greece are look ing up. A prince of the Greek 1 royal bouae baa wou an American widow worth 114,000,000. Von llindenburg ia to publish his memoirs. We wonder if they will the EMo try I Went He air Hnere- Hmrion I antl- I were Hiarks If cer- I way Hdy of Hiubll- Hirned much » soil i the r*-M tor COMMUNITY MUSIC. Thb to be Part of Exteaaioa Service of. University-Prof. Wearer to go Out end Lector* on Stag ing—Exchange of Pro fessori&ip Plan Among Southern Uni versities Cor. ol The Gleaner. Chapel Hill, N. C, March 2. New plana for the development of community music in North Caro lina are announced in a recent • leaflet of the bureau of extension of the University of North Caro lina, prepared by Paul J. Weaver, Professor of Muaic. Defining community muaic aa everything which wilt be of aid in malt in ;r the community mnaical, Mr. Weaver saya that the "sing" is the fundamental expression of community muaic, "for here everyone can participate, no mat ter what the age, creed, or color, and no matter if some cannot even carry a tune." The community chorus is the next'step beyond the "sing," and beyond tha'» comes the men's chorus, the com munity baud, the community orchestra, and other community instrumental organizations. Mass music such as this, Mr. Weaver say*, has proved its im portance in American life. "It is iu its very nature democratic ... It is a most potent force in 1 biuding men together for a com mon cause aud iu forming ant directing public sentiment. It in recognized as a mont vital factor t in the present 'Americanization' movement . . It is earnestly be lieved that community music can be one of the most effective means of solviug the negro problem in , the Southern States." Through the bureau ol exten sion Mr. Weaver will be sent out to deliver lectures on community music and to lead community sings throughout the State. He has already started at Chapel Hill a series of Sunday afternoon con certs, which have been laregely attended by students in the Uul [ versity. Mr. George Ilowe, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts aud head of the f.Atin department, spent last week at the University of Month Carolina delivering a serien of lectures before the University. The Universities of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Vanderbilt University have an exchange professorship pirn by which a member of the faculty of each institution goes each spring, to another institution in the group to deliver special lec tures in his Held of work. Later in the spring l)r. J. C. Metcalfe of the University of Virgiuia, will come to Chapel Hill. Professor T F. Uickerson, head of the civil engineering depart ment, has also delivered lectures recently at the University of South Carolina, the occasion being a road institute held in Columbia by the University of South Caro lina. • 100 Reward. SIOO Tlio raatlur* of tbla papor will be pleaawl to It-Ani tl>at thrr* la at lesst on* droadad dla iam that aoianca lias b#«u able to our* In all Ita lUveo and that la catarrh. Catarrh being ■ really Influenced bjr constitutional condi tions reuulrw constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medicine Is taken Internally and acta thr nigh the lllood on the Mucous Hurt sees ot the Hystem thereby destroying th* inundation of the disease, giving the i» t ilent strength by building up the constitu tion aud aaslstliif nature fri doing Its work. Th* proprietors nave so mush faith In the (Mirativc powers of Hall's Catarrh Medicine f at they offer one Hundred Dollars for any ease that It fells to cure Mend for Hat of Ic*. Union! ale. Address H. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio. Bold by all Druggist, 7!W\ ad. Mineral Matter and Milk. Experiments conducted by the Bureau of Animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture, with dairy cows are showing nn im]>ortaiit relation between milk secretion and cer tain mineral substances. Feed ing compounds of phosphorus and calcium have remitted in a decidedly beneficial effect on the milk flow in both quantity and fat content. It has lieen shown also that a deficiency of phosphorus in dairy rations has a detrimental effect on milk secretion of cows and growth of calves. A remedy was found in the addition of sodium phosphate to rations de ficient in phosphorus. The work is being continued. Free 1920 Calendar and Book (or Our Readers. We take pleasure in announc ing that any subscriber or reader of this paper can secure a vest pocket memorandum book with 1920 calendar and much useful Information by seuding the {Mist age therefor, three cents in stamps to D. Swift A Co., Patent Attor neys, Washington, D. C. It con tains valuable Information about past presidential elections, show ing how each State voted in each preeidential election during the last forty years. It also shows the population of each State dur ing the census of 1800, 1900 and 1910. States the amount of corn, wheat, oats, potatoes, tobacco, hay aud cottou produced by each Slate in 1910. Gives a brief synopsis of business laws, patent laws and much other useful in formation. For four ceuta in stamps we will send a nice 1920 wall calendar 10 by 11 inches. Send 7 eno cent staiup* and get the caleodar and book. tf The Senate is a more intelligent body now tlmu it was last month. Carter Glass haa become a mem ber of it. Whit Do You Want? Charlotte ObaeiVer. Juat what do you want? High coats and low wages, or low coat* and high wages? Anybody with one whole thought in bl* bead will any that he want* low coata with high wages. And we can have thla if each, of ua wilHlo his part. There ia juat one way to git what all the country needa. That one way ia work.' We can't reduce prices until we increase production. We can't .increase production until every mother's eon, and daughter, buck lea down to the Job with the do termination \o produce to the limit. There ia noplace for the alacker in bnaineea, or anywhere else. It ia time each of ua understauda his responsibility. It makes no difference what you are doing; hut it makes a lot of difference how you dolt. Your job may be in the "front office," or in the factory, or in the home; wherever It is it's Your Job, and you can't be fair to yourself or anybody else unless you give that job the best there is in you. You can't reduce the cost of living bjt,,howling about it. But you can reduce it by doing more and better work. As soon as you speed up, production, prices will have to drop. They will have to drop because the market will have all the goods it wants. After y®u have shown what you cau do it will be time to talk. Now ,1 is the time to work. Take tin interest in your work. Alt of us can do more than we are now doing. Get ou the job with a cheer. Produce and watch the prices tall. Make every minute count. Make your dollar worth what it used to bo worth. It's up to You. Jilted, Blind Preacher Takes to the Warpath. Lenoir, March 1. —Rev. Albert J. Setzer, a blind preacher, ran amuck with a 38-calibor pistol at lludsou, threatening to Hhoot the wan who had won his sweetheart's affections and then kill himself, several days ago, according to uews just reaching here. Set/.er was preparing Xo get mar ried. lie had already rented a house aud had partly furnished it for what he thought an impro priate wedded life. Then the girl turned him down and he went on the warpath. Undaunted by his handicap of blindness, the preacher secured his trusty old "38" and made his way to the gnH#hoine, whore he expected to And his rival. According to reports, he plannol to first shoot his rival aud theu turn the pistol on himself aud end it all. Upon failing to find the man, he created a bit of excite ment with a short sermon, usyjg the pistol in making more em phatic ceitaiu points which he wanted to convey. Friends prevailed upon the preacher to quiet down. They secured his pistol and oarried hiin t* the home of a neighbor. ltev. Mr. Set«ir, though blind, is highly educated. He lias been a hard worker in county religious circles aud has been held in high esteem. Country Comforts. Dean E. Davenport, in the Colin try Gentleman. Of all men Jhe farmer lives most in his home, llis home aud his business are so interlocked as to make it quit*' impossible to say where the one leaves ofT aud the other begins. The farmer has beeu working long for land, lie proposes uow to lie housed com fortably. lie proposes that his wife shall have some of the com forts and conveniences of house keeping and he challenges the world to produce a housekeeper who more richly deserves them. Is there anv woman who labor* as continuously ami carries as un remitting responsibility as the farmer, and is there any oilier housekeeper who works as long hours for three hundred and sixty five days in the year as does the farmers wife? The answer to all these ques tions is: We are going to have the modem couvenieneea for the farmer'a wife, who for the most part does her own work and is nurse, cook aud lanndry maid «s well as mother and waiter extra ordinary. We are going to have these things for her whether we can afford them or not, and the coat is going into the overhead. Not luxury but comfort is to be the slogan for American agricul ture, aud at last we are orgaui/cd to secure it. Partly by education aud partly by Increased outla* a more comfortable life is coming to the farm. TAKE IT IN TIME Jaat aa Mcarn af linkta I'roplr Mate. Wailing doesn't .pay. If YOU neglect kidney, backache. Urinary troubles often follow. Doan's Kidney Pills are for kid ney backache, and for other kid ney ills. Graham citisens endorse thorn. Mrs. Bottle L. Picksrd. W. Kim St., says, "About two veara s.jo I was troubled with a- dull naT glng pain in the small of my back. I was very nevous and dltxv aid black speck* blurred my ngn'! The kidney aecretlona passed irregu larly, too. When Doan's kUnev Kidney Pills were recommended to me, I got s box from Orihim Drug Co., snd they cure the b«ck sches and rid me of the I cant praise Doan's highly enough. Price 60c. at all dealers. Dont simply ask for s kidney remedy— getDoan's Kidney Pills—the simr that Mrs. Ptckard had. Poster-M:i bum Co., Mfgi*. Buffslo, N. Y. LIEUT. iOVERNOR ™ STUDENT 808 OKA KM ON SUBJECT OP "LtWM MORE ABUNDANT FOR NORTH ; CAROLINIAN#.* EXPRESS GHALLEKGE FOH LIFE w •• ■dueatore being paid Eighteen Centt an Hour and Brloklaysra Ninety Ave «• Rldleuloue Contertlon Addressing the student body of the State Undreralty Lieoteaant Oorernoi O. Max Gardner dlscuaeed the •abject, "Life More Abundant for North Caro linians." "If 1 were called on tonight to outline the platform of my party," the speaker raid'. "I would make the keynote ring and tbrob with an ex pression of challenge for lifer—life more abundantly. For, after all. young men, what 4s the prime objeel ef government? What la It humanity throughout the egee haa yearned and suffered and died for? What la edu ctlon. health, uplift, juitlce and social service but man'* struggle upward for life, more abundant life. "At the risk of a slight dlgreaelon, I assert thai educationally. North Carolina will never fulfill the ldeali of genuine democracy and accomplish the full measure of life more abund antly until provision la made to pay school teachers and college profee sors more nearly what they are worth. The State's sens" of fairness and Juat lee ought by thla time to be gererelj shocked by the appalling figures ol comparison which are almost dally brought to Ks attention. It Is a rid to nleui contortion of the value of human service that will tolerate the payment of eighteen cents an hour for the edu caters and ninety-five cents an houi for the bricklayer. On* Day** Flu Record Influent* Is releasing It* grip or RaMrfi and North Carolina, 729 n*w canes being In on® day reported frota the various counties and 17 from R* letgh with one death. New caaee of Influenza reported to the State Doaard of Health from th« ▼artou* counties, with the death* fol low. Alamanoe, 12; Chatham, 19; Dur ham, 112; FrankHn, ( with 1 death; Harnett, 25; Henderson, 2; Johnson, 161; l*«, 20; with 1 death; Lenoir 29; Montgomery, 3; Perquimans, 1; Sampson, 20; Wake, 12; Washington. 13; Watauga, S; Yancey, 8. Reports from dUe* follow: Greens boro, I with one de*th; Wilmington, 4 death*; Raleigh. 17 with 1 (Jeath; Oeldsboro, 4 death*. 'Nothing Wrong with America "There 1* nothing wrong with Am# lea today except In the minds of U)« men who dpubt themselres, their fel low* and the fundamental princlpl* of Justice upon which this republic li founded," Secretary of the Nary Jo sephu* Daniel* told the Raleigh Ro tary Club at a dinner In the Tar borough In celebration of the birth day of Rotary and' Oeorge Washing ton. Secretary Daniels, honor guest, pleaded for the faith of Washington, for men now, "Washington had the poise thai this world needs today, said the sec retary, "faith in the government ol th* people which should mot be sway ed by lords or mob* but by law and order. Justice ant fair dealing.'* Dsnlss Ownership of Land In leea than a day after R. C. Chop tin, a Wfcke termer, had denied that two stills were recently found In his /inn, revenue officers oaptured a still and destroyed 300 gallon* of beer sa a spring branch about 400 yards from Chsplla'* own residence. About a week ago raifers found Vtflf stills on Choplln'* land, and one waa near the father'* house while the other was near the son'* home. Seabertl to The Re*cu* Officials of the Seaboard Air Line have come to the rescne of employe* who had trouble In figuring out their Income* of the past year. The com pany will furnish the Income of every employ* to the Income Tax Division ot the Internal Revenue Department after March 1. This will enable the revenue department to mall income figures to the employee. Because of the varying amounts ot pay Includ ing back time employee had consid erable trouble In making out returns. Leflelature May meet in June At the last regular seesion of the North Carolina Legislature the Gov ernor was directed to call a special seesion during 1920 for framing legls latton to enforce a new taxation act This session. It la bolteved. will be railed for June and advocates of suf frage have announced that they ex pect to bring the suffrage amendment up at this session. Th* opinion is general that K win he ratified. At the last session the amendment was adopted by the Senate by a large majority bat was killed la the Hons* NATURE PROVIDES THE INGREDIENTS Argo-Phosphatr. the New llcrbel HeoM-). New Ksdnraed by Ural Proplr. B If thr digestive organs are not properly performing tint work which naturv hits aasignrd to them, then nutrition, which Is absolutely essentisl to the . recovery of other diseased parts, will be lacking ami there can be no permanent relief. When bodily nutrition is normal, the stomach digests the food, the blood absortis and oarries the nourishment to the different parts of the body, causing the various organs to properly perform their func tions Suture has provided a remedy in the ingredients of Argo-Pboaphalc, the new herbal stomach remody, which is now br ine introduced here. It is purely vege table and it* vitalizing corrective an I reconstructive qualities are so pronounced that beneficial results are noticed from the first day. That this is true, it i* only accessary to listeu to the statements msile daily by local people who have given Argo-Phosphate a fair trial and have been benefited thereby It is dispensed by II ayes Drug Co. Millions Need Pepto-Mangan - wir. r"" ■' ' Weed . - -1 Pepto-Mangan I ■proves lUood t'oaposed of Approved IMood-Maklng Elements—Put Up In IJqaldaad Tab let Form Are you tired and weak and "blnef" Do yon Bay to yourself, "What's the use of living? What do I get oat of life, dragging through thjs disb existence in this unhappy way?" You don't feel well and joo don't know why you have so lit tle energy to do anything, lino you get all tired out before it is done. There are millions in huny America that have "such feelings now and then, and they are to le pitied. Bat there is help. Unless some serious malady Is at the bot tom of their trouble, a few weeks of Pepto-Mangan will work a won derful change. Pepto-Mangan puts new vigor into the blood, and the blood is the life fluid. With plenty of rich, red blood coursing through one's body one is pretty likely to feel good and vigorous and be strong and look hearty. Go to your drupgist and ask for "Gude's Pepto-Mangan." Be sure to say "Gude's." If "Gude's" is not on the package it is not Pepto Mangan. It is put up in both liquid and tablet foiiiK Tell the druggist which -yon prefer. Thete is no difference in medici nal value. adv Gold Production in 1919 Spokane Spokesman Review. Twenty States and the terri- Tory of Alaska produced gold in 1919, as shown by the "report of the Bureau of the Mint and the 1 Geological purvey. The big , productions came fronfthe Rocky ; Mountain States and the Pacific Coast, but a little gold was « mined in New England, a little 1 in the South and a little in the \ Mississippi Valley. Maine, Missouri and South ' Carolina got in the record by yielding five ounces each, Ver ; mont found ten ounces, Georgia L and North Carolina forty-eight ounces, Texas fifty-three ounces i and Wyoming fifteen. J i California led with an output of 840, 75S ounces. Colorada catne second with 470,9!>8, and Alaska was a close third with i 437,131. South Dakota came ■ fourth with 254,820. The yield of the Pacific North * west, in ounces and value, was; >ss. Value. h Washington, 14,987 $ 308,800 •- Idaho, 34,3'i0 710,400 ► Oregon, .11,848 .1,071,800 Montana 119,085 2.4(14,700 The Philippine Islands pro duced 39,9fi2 ounces, and the I total yield, including tin? United States, Alaska and the Philip -1 pines, was 2,829,305 ounces, . valued at $58,488,800, a falling off of $10,157,8000, from the yield of 1917. The Farmer and His Table. i From The Houston Post. ' Governor Bickett of North Caro lina sums up the situation forcot -1 ton farmers in this bit of homely I advice to make their owu "hog t and homiuy" this year, regardless , of what they do to stabilize cot ton prices. To fail to raise their own bread aud meat would be a criminal blunder, in the opinion of lite North Carolina Chief who, iu a letter to President Wan natnaker of the American Cottoiy Association, suggests that AftV. Wanuamaker could render a great service to the Southern farmer* by driving this truth home to them. The Governor's idea is the right one Unless the farmer provides his own supplies, he will not be iu a position to have much to say about the price at which he sells his cotton. \ Resolutions by or i utilizations, denunciations, and even good warehouses in which t.j I hold cotton will not get the farm ► er very far who doesn't have the basis of his living already pro * vided for. Holding cotton in warehouses for slow marketing is a good policy ' for the farmer. But it is also a | form of speculation. His only s safety, therefore, lies in making f his own "hog aud hominy" which , assures him of food no matter . what- happens to the cotton mark et. If he has his food supply pro vided, as Governor Bickett says, j he can hold his cotton indefi nitely. ( •It is never wise, for any man, farmer or otherwise, to involve his living in speculation. | CASTOR IA , kor Infanta and Children [ In Uso For Over 30 Years Always bears Shtoamre of C*C • Governor Edwards of New Jersey imagining himserf of presi dential size, should remember AwopV fable of the ffbg that tried to swell up to the size of a bull. The Philadelphia laquirerspeaks of "the great Uryan mystery," but, after all, is there much myf-1 tery about it? . mull /i !|/r 'HIHI 111111' 111H!~1111 I!llll llllllillillllll iililllillliiiMWy^lii 11ni 1 p! l!i mi M Put Slacker Acres to Work |H| needs every pound of farm the South can furnish, and is PS^Bilj MtmaßLM| ready to pay handsome prices for them. Never before has tho uJH |§r|Vjg| Southern Intelligent fertilization of every acre in cultivation is more nec- KflaßcESa PwgfllWra® essary now than ever before, because each acre should be made to SgWfMFw yield its utmost. This cannot be done unless the proper class and malyHtmffl quantities of fertilizers are used. Low acres and inferior The MORRIS BRANDS resist leaching, prevent shedding, j| ! and hasten fruitful maturity of the crop. Only the hest class oC WMjfym materials enter into their manufacture. That's why they al- i|wj&||J| NOTICE! Sheriffs Sale Under Ex ecution. In the matter of A L. Davis, Assignee of the Judgment of: Odell Hardware Copipiiiy vs. Holt Engine Company. ]sj virtue of an execution direct ed to ihe undersigned Sheriff of Alamance county, from the Su perior Court of Alamance county, Norih Carolina, in the above en titled Judgment, said, execution having been duly served, and levy huving been made (hereunder as provided by law, upon the real property hereinafter described, I will,' on MONDAY, APRIL 5, 11)20, at li o'clock, noon, at the court house door in Graham, said coun ty and State, sell to the highest bidder for fash, to Hatisfy said execution and the Judgment in which it is the following described real property and all the right, title, interest and estate belonging to the said defendant, Holt Engine Co , and its successors anil assigns: A certain tract or parcel of land in Burlington town,ship, Alamance county and State of North Caro lina, adjoining the lands of J. A. Isley it Bros. Co., Spencer Thomas, and B. K. Sollars, tho same lying anil being in tho City of Burling ton, North Carolina, and bounded as follows: Beginning at an iron bolt, a corner with Spencer Thomas, B. R. Sellars and J. A. Isley fc Bros. Co,, running thence with the line of the Isley Bros Co. N 83 deg W 4 chains and 63 links to a stone, Isley Bros. Co.'s corner; thence their line S 11 deg W 1 chain 94 Iks to a stone and an iron bolt on game line; thence S 83 degE4chs 92 Iks to an iron bolt on B. R. Sellars' l.iue; thenco with the line of said B. R. Sellars N | deg E 1 chain and 24 Iks to the beginning, containing 92-100 of an acre, more or lesp. Being the same land conveyed to Holt Engine Co. by John H. "CJupp, by deed dated September "28th, 1911, and recorded in the oflice of the Register of Deeds for Alamance county, in Deed Book No. 44, at page 539. This 10th day of Feb., 1920. C. D. STOREY, Sheriff Alamance County. gamin MONEY BACK without question If Hunt' • Sal •• /•ilt in the treatment ofllciemn. Tetter. Ringworm, Itch, etc. J Don't become discouraged be- # M cause other treatments failed. I #Vf M Hunf's Salra has relieved hun- iR / dretn of such cases. You can't % f lose on our Money Bark v CuiranfM. Try it at our rWk TODAY. Price 75c at GRAHAM DRUG COMPANY, GRAHAM, N. C. Z. T. HADLE\ Jeweler and Optician GRAHAM. N.C. HOW MUCH DO YOU SHOW YOUR AGE ? A new form of Natural Iron enriches the blood smooths out wrinkles—strengthens the nerves—wards off old age. When you begin to show and feel your age, it is because your blood is • thin ahd weak—it no longer carries life and strength to different parts Of the body. The man or woman with warm, rich red blood retains the appearance and feelings of youth, in spite of the creeping years. To ward off the feebleness and appeAance of old we is- simply a matter of keeping he blood pure and rich and filled with life and vigor. Iron is the greatest and surest blood maker, but heretofore the diffi culty has been to' procure it in a form which the human system would absorb in sufficient quantities to bring satisfactory results. Pills and tonics said to contain iron have usu ally brought only disappointment. But now there need be no longer any doubt or question, for a success ful and reliable method of getting For Sale by All Good Druggists. Burwell & Dunn and John M. Scott &Co., Charlotte, N. C., Calomel loses you a day! You know what calomel is. It's mercury; quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous. It crashes into sour bile like dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your system. Take "Dodson's Liver Tone" Instead I When yoo feel bilious, sluggish, constipated and all knocked out and believe you need a dose of dangerous calomel, just remember that your druggist sells for a few cents a large bottle of Qodson's Liver Tone, which 'is entirely vegetable and pleasant to take and is a perfect substitute for Relieve Y OUI* does by improving r|i • digestion, assimilation Kneumatism , . and elimination For 25c. the logical way. NR Today—Relief or No Pay ✓ There are three vital processes of human existence, —the digestion of food, tho extraction of nourishment from It and the elimination ot tho waste. Let anything interfere -with these process**!. —let them bo Interrupted or Improperly carried on, and of some kind follows. Poor digestion and asslmfla-M 1 lion means failura to deriveM »'• full nourishment from food and ■ k that In turn often means 1m- V m poverisljed blood, weakness, anemia, etc. I'oor elimination means an accumulation of waste matter which poisons the body, lowers vitality, decreases the power of re sistance to disease and leads to tho development of many serious Ills. Rheumatism,—due to some interfer ence with tho process of elimination, failure to get rid of certain body poisons,—cannot be expected to yield to any medicine that falls to correct the condition responsible for It. Could any reasonable person expect to rid himself of rheumatic pain aa long as ihim-fitrntin 'fir";,"Si iron into the blood is assured by the use of a natural form of soluble iron known as Acid Iron Mineral There are thousands of cases on re cord that-prove this natural iron is a powerful blood and nerve builder. For want of iron in the blood, you may be old at thirty, or you are more readily subject to the attack of dis ease without warning, or you will find yourself growing feebler day by day. If you want to feel the elasticity of youth in your veins, and avoid all - the complications and disappoint ments or increasing age, you will start taking Acid Iron Mineral at once. It contains no alcohol or in jurious drugs, and it will not blacken the teeth like most preparations of , iron. Druggists will refund the purchase price cheerfully, if you fail to receive the improvement you seek. j Distributors calomel. It is guaranteed to start your lifef without stirring you up inside, and can not salivate. Don't take calomel! It mokes yoo sick the next day; it loses you a day's work. Dodaon's Liver Tone straight ens you right up and you feel gnat Give it to the children becaoaa it li perfectly harmless and gripe." I rheumatic poison la allowed to re main In the body. Think of this. It explain! the suc cess of Nature'* Remedy (NR Tab lets) In to many cases where other medicines haVe failed. Thousands are uslnr NR Tablets every day and cet- relief. Why pay five or tea times aa much for uncertain I thing*? A 2So box of Nature's ■ ■ Remedy (NR Tablets), con > talnlng enough to last twenty _ > five days,—must help you, must 1 S W Blvo you prompt relief and sat- Ufactory beacUt or coat yoa nothing. , And not only for the relief of rheumatism. It Im prove* digestion, tones the liver, reg ulate* kidney and bowel action, im proves the blood and cleanses the whole system. You'll feel like a new person when you've taken NR Tablets a You've tried tho expensive medicines and doctors, now make the real test You'll get results this time. Nature's Remedy (Nil Tablets) la roid, guaranteed and recommended br your druggist *'

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