Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Oct. 21, 1915, edition 1 / Page 7
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machine TO CMtm LIARS. Scientists hve iiwented a new mv to eateh Kaaa. Specalatic. e over the pwwpect of experiment g with It 1a Atlanta, af.d some other lie. .. 'if is a delicate iastrumcnt that orda Wood pressurs by mean of needle ana 01 ai wnea piuceu m wo jut with the wrist of the persoa Rationed. The normal bloodpres- fe point for the needle on the dial 1120, and fc is claimed that it a lie 1 told during the questioning the Ight metital exeiteraent attendant j 130, while if a sore enough Lhpper" or ft lie of far reaching Jnsequeaoe is told, the blood p res- ire may run as nign as iv. iff it i applied to lovers in their dent declarations, there's ne telling fhere the blood pressure registration kill g V. JiverjruiiK. j A Wonderful Antiseptic 1 fauns and infection aggravate ail- Vents and retard healing. Stop that ifection at once. Krtt the germs and jet rid of the poisons. For this pnr Lso a single application of Sloan's fimment not only kills the nain bat destroys the germs. This neatralzes Infection and gives nature assistance fty overcoming congestion and gives I Chance ior sue lice ua nunnu iuw 1 if the Mood. Sloan's Liniment is an emergency doctor and should be kept Constantly on hand. 25c., 50c. The 1.00 size contains eix times as much OUR WEALTH IN FOREST PRO-. DUCTS. At the North Carolina Club session Ithe other night Mr. J. H. Lassit,er of fxTnrfliamntnn rmintv hrieflv detailed ithe forest wealth of the State as fol lows. Nearly twenty Billion acres of I wood land, containing 430 billon board feet of standing timber, la which particular North Carolina ranks among the first four states of the Un ion. An annual timber cut of 4 billion board feet. Lumber and timber pro ducts worth $34,000,000 a year, rank ing next t cotton and tobacco manu facture as a sousce of annual wealth. Our farm wood-lot promiots, main ly firewood, were worth $11,000,000 in (be census year; in which particular North Carolina outranked every other state in the Union. The annual firewood cut is some 720,000 cords per year, epual to three biHon board feet of Umber; which 1 eaaUy accounts for the fact that no body was ever known to freeze to death in North Carolina. - - - Wt have 33,000 saw mills. 117 farnl- tWe and refrigerator ' factories? ' 138 carriage and wagon works, 12 car and general eenstruction shops. If we count the lumber and timber indus tries, they employed 44,000 people and turned out products worth $50.- 000,000 in the census year. Our own wood-working eiiiMish- raento consumes nearly a thii-d of our lumber and timber products, or aroand $11,000,000 worth of them annualy. VniATCATOIS" It has been said that every third persoa has catarrh ia some form. Science has shown that nasal cat nil often indicates a general weakness of the body; and local treatments m the form of anuria and vapors do attic. a any good. To correct catarrh yon thonld treat ka cause by enriching your Mood with the oti-iooa in scows Bmuision wnicn is a medicinal food and a building-tonic, free from alcohol or any harmful drugs. Try it. Scott ft Bowne. MoomSeld, K, J. ADVICE FOR MALE MEN SEVERE PUIIISHI.IEIIT Of Ifrs. OkcfpeH, ef Firt Tears' Studlaf, Refiertl by C&rdoi. ML Alrr. N. C. Mrs. Sarah M. Chan- tell of this town, says: "I suffered tor ve years with womanly troubles, also stomach troubles, and my punishment, was more than any one could tell. I tried most every kind of medicine, but none did me any good. I read one day about Cardul, the wo man's tonic, and 1 decided to try it. I bad not taken but about six bottles until I was almost cured. It did me more good than all the other medicines I had tried, put together. Mv friends bezan 'asking me why I looked so we'i, and I told them about Cardul. Several are now taking it." Do you, lady reader, suffer from any of the ailments due to womanly trouble, .U - l,uali. kaxkaoh MmkIi. sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired Eeeungr If so. let us urge you to give Cardul a trial. We feel confident it wiU help you, lust as it has a million other women in the past half century. Bezta taking Cardul to-day. You won't regret it. All druggists. 9vj. OuHuuwn htsdtdnt Co- Ladles Idrtsory !.. Chattanoofs, Tsna., lor Twlmsnt lot Woman," Id niala wrappst. H.C Health and Happiness Depend Upon Your Liver. That sluggish liver with its slug Risk flow of bile is what makes Cj world look so dark at times. Dr. King's New Life Pills go straight to the root of the difficulty by waking up the action of the liver and increas ing the bile. Dr. King'B New Life PHls cause the bowels to act more freely and drive away those "moody days." Z5c. a Dottie. Men, men, what are you talking about? Nothing that is worth the breath you are spending. Why don't you go home and out your wife some stove wood? She has out or picked up in the woods the lest piece she has burned all the time lately. And one of the children has whoop ing cough, and the other has burned his fingers. But "Oh my; I had rath er be in tosment with my back broke than to hear those kids holler." I will do as I please. The "old lady" will take care of things. She will feed, get all the wood and water, and if she doesn't do the last thing she doesn't get any more credit than if she had done nothing; and if she does all those things it is no more than her daty. Men, you ought to think how nice your wife was to you when you was drank last, and how she helped you out ef that shooting scrape. You stand around on the corner with your thumbs under your suspenders, smoking a five cent cigar, bought with your "old lady's" egg money or on credit, and I am afraid if your brains were ink there would not be enough to dot an L Men, buy you a nice suit of clothes and ro around and enjoy life. Pass off as a young single man. Don't buy your wife a hat. She won't go anywhere. One of you will have to stay at homeland of course your wife can attend to things better than yon for she is used to it and you are not. You hear a man say, "Oh, I'd rather go to work without my breakfast than make biscuit," and if you were to make any a hog had rather go and root for his breakfast than to eat one. But no, she is nothing but a dead expense, always calling for money. The fact ia she never gets the mon ey she call for, and the poor thing has worn the same old black skirt which you took good spell and bought her the spring after you f were mar ried, and that has changed to a nwty brown. But by all means dress yon r- self. Buy fifty cent hose and any thing you like. It doesn't make any difference how your wife looks. If she goes with you to church enoe a year no one will suspect her to be yew wife, judging from your actions, and if you have been married six months never help your wife out of a buggy or wagon. She is no better to crawl 'out than you are te waste time helping her. But if it is some other lady, be polite. If one of your children whines around you when you are reading, slap him down, and keep on chewing tobaeco and reading. The "old lady" will pick bun up. Yes, men, you are honies, but the bees don't know it. Go your route; have a good time. The poor woman will soon lie down to rest. .' v Then bury her and carve these words oa her tomb: "Here lies the remains of Nancy Proctor, She died for the want of a doctor. She hated to leave but she had to go, Praise God from whom all blessings flow." MISS. RAMBLER, in Chatham Rec ord. belief that it would reach that place j by 9 o'clock that night. The casket and other burial articles arrived sev- eral days late, and Byera asked $3,- 000 . for inconvenience in having to purchase a cheaper coffin r.nd for mental anguish incident to the delay. A verdict of $$00 waa recovered be low, after the expresj company had plead that Byers had been paid all that waa due him under the provision of the bill-of-lading which stipulated thar the company would not be liable for more than $50 owing to delafr or damages, setting up that the Garmaok amendment excluded the consideration 0' mental anguish. After losing the case before the State Supreme Court, which held that the Carmaok amend ment was not involved the express company still contends as origin&Uy that it was denied the construction of the statute in its favor as urged. Since the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly held that mental anguish cannot be made a ground for damages in a delay in shipping g?ods the case raises an interesting question and one that will be watched with interest, since a casket is goods, tho' of a peculiar character. USH! AOi S1MGH. SOURXESS, HEARTBUB!., 6AS OR OIGESTiOlt The moment "Pane's Diapepeia ' reaches the stomach all distress goes. HIE LESSON OF THE MOON LIGHT SCHOOLS. THE BYERS CASE IN SUPREME COURT. Among the cases on the United States Supreme Court docket from N. Carolina is the well knows case ci the Southern Express Co., vs. John Byers, involving construction of the Carmack amendment to the Hepburn act, ond raising the question as to whether or not mental anguish is an element of damage in applying the terms of this law. The Carmack amendment makes the initial carrier liable for goods shipped. The North Carolina State Supreme Court held that there could be a recovery, Judge Brown dissenting. Byers instituted his suit in Bun combe County, alleging among ether things that his wife died March 31, 1912, at Hickory Grove, S. C, and that he ordered a complete burial outfit at Ashville, April 1st, and ex pressed it for Hickory Grove with the The State is forging ahoad in its efforts to wipe oat illiteracy and five hundred more teachers who work all day in the schools with the r.hfldrea have volunteered to work at night free of charge with tho ill it era to adurts who are ignorant of the enlightening pow er of the twenty-six letters in our al phabet. Illiteracy a Disease. At least it has been called such, and if so it is a disease that is- contracted in early life. Our self-sacrificing teaahers are heroically risking their lives in night work to effect a care, An Ounce ef Prevention. It is the heaviest and most effective ounce that' was ever pat upon the scales. We vaccinate against -the small pox, hot to cure it but te prevent it, and the doctors are now success fully fighting the diead disease typhoid fever with a preventive ' rather than with a cure. They tell us that the way to "stamp out" typhoid fever is to prevent it, and hence free aati-ty phoid treatment may be had for the asking. Prevent Illiteracy. This should be the cry of every crusader agaiast illiteracy. The way Do some foods you eat hit back taste good, bat work b&dhy; feament into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this flown: Pape'a Diavepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safety quick, so certainly effective. No difference how bajlly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stom ach so you can eat your favorite foods witnout lear. Most remedies give you relief some times they are slow, bat not sure. 'Tape's Diapepsin" is quick, positive. and puts year stomach in a healthy Condition so the misery won't come back. You feel different ra soon as "Pape'a Diapepsta" comes in contact with the stomach distress just vanishes your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food, ycur head clears ana ;sm feet fiae. Go now, make the best investment you ever made, by getting a large hfty-cent ease of rape s Diapcpain from any drug sto-e. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia 01" any stomach disorder. to stamp it out forever, as with small pox and typhoid fever, is to prevent it. The cry "prevent illiteracy" should be heard in the day sohool and in the night school, in the pulpit, on the rostrum, at the street corner and along the highways. Compulsory Vaccination Against Il literacy Is successfully accomplished the very moment we compel our children to attend school every day in the term. There should be no absences. If we had compulsory school attendance in every county in the State we should soon have no illiteracy in North Caro lina. From Moonlight to Sunlight. Let's prevent illiteracy in the youth of today and thus avoid having to treat it in old age when the disease is chronic.Let's fill the sunlight schools of today with children of the land and thera will be no need of moonlight schools hi the future for any of the grown up people. I EIGHT HANDSOME AND EXPENSIVE PRIZES. FIRST GRAND PRIZE FORD PASSENGER TOURING CAR, Fully Equipped, will be awarded the contestant who gets the largest nunber of votes in the Courier's Automobile aad Piano Contest. These cars are for sale in Asheboro by the Asheboro Mtor Co. JE8I Second Grand Prize This standard hightoned $375 York Piano will be awarded to the contestant who re ceives the second largest number of votes in the Courier contest. These Pianos are sold in Asheboro by Messrs. A. N. & E. M. Cullom. FIFTH GRAND PRIZE faiiiisap1iiiii,ly.Hg,K'vW-S High Grade Cooking Range to be awarded to the contest ant who re ceives tke fifth largest number of votes in the contest. ThisRaage may be se.ea at the Mc-Crary- Red ding Hard ware Store. THIRD GRAND PRIZE Fourth Grand Prize A BEAUTIFUL AND ARTISTIC Suit of Furniture which retails anywhere at $125.60. This suit of furniture will be awarded to the contestant who has third largest number of votes. The Continental Furniture Co., of High Point, re liable furniture manufacturers, are the makers of this suit. Open Top Rock Hill Buggy (Carolina Grade) Awarded to the contestant who has the largest number of votes in the Courier contest. These buggies are sold by the McCrary-Red-ding Hardware Co., and may be seen at their store. DISTRICT PRIZES After the five grand prizes are awarded to the five contestants who have largest number of votes, the next highest in each of the three districts will be awarded either a diamond ring or a Free Sewing Machine. Mr. D. A. Cornelison, at Seagrove, is coun ty agent for this machine.
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 21, 1915, edition 1
7
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