Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Nov. 15, 1923, edition 1 / Page 7
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irsday, November 15,1923 BVHNTY-Bix'Years Young," D LOUIS C. POST Says He , At Last, Oared of Rhovmattsm. I*l am now past 76 years of age *4 never felt better in my life,*' 'id Louis O. Post of Washington ape, Newburgh, N. Y., “and I can ■ld up my end of a day’s work with S best of them.” * [‘When I commenced to take 3UTRONE PRESCBIPTION ‘99’, iwas a broken-down old man, my nts were stiff and swollen ahd the ins were so bad that I could hard sleep at night. “No one ever suffered more from jicumatism than I did. I was both a ysical and nervous wreck, •com- Jetely worn out, and thought my me had come. Today, after a few weeks’ use ij Neutronc Prescription ‘99’, I jvo as much strength and energy j I ever had. I do not feel a day rer 40 years of age, earn my own king and ask no favors of any man, d all my friends are telling me w well I look and act. “To tell the truth, J do not know rat would have become (if me if Jutrone Prescription ‘99’ had nqt moved all my rheumatic troubles id given me a new lease on life, id I will praise it to the end of ray ys._ Neutronc Prescription ‘99’ rtainly put me on iny feet when erything else had failed.” Neutrone Prescription “99” now mes in Tablet Form as well as quid Form, whichever is preferred. Leading Druggists everywhere. Gtiiscn Drug Store ■ -TT— i-T- I I JfX I I I PriCM Os til (tot) Bo .rs ; j (X V r- ■ Jn Pricos of J/V I BH | Goodytar Tiret \ h014<9151916 l91? w8l»» 192(1 1921 1922 IS2J \ ■ “-rfy This uttu chart shows that for years Goodyear Tire prices have been kept below the av erage price level of all commodities. Goodyear Tires to day cost 39% less than they did in 1914. And they are the best tires Good year ever made. This is a good time to . buy Goodyears. • Ae Goody mar Service Station Dealers we emit and recom mend the new Goodyear Corde with the beveled All- K, Weather Tread and back \ them up with etandard Goodyear Service SOI/THCRN MOTOR SERVICE * COMPANY, INC. , GOODiYEAf WOMEN FROM FORTY TO FIFTY DTI Be Interested in Mrs.Hooker’i Recovery by Use of Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound StPaul.Minn. —“I was going through he Change of Life and suffered from a condition M UMlMiillllll Md the troubles a woman has to go Bp through at that time. ’ B hot hashes, nervous- W£ ness and headaches. At times I was not H '7* } 1 able to do my work, .ill but since taking IIBa I bydia E. Pinkham’l illlufe I • P° und l am gaining lljMHk J every day and can do "WfiPv 'ii, ——l my work with more >aae than I hav# for five or aix years, owe it all to your great medicine. dARTHA Hooker, 114 College Avenue, it Paul, Minn. \ women who re between the vith such annoying symptoms? as^ner^ ■:h produce headaches, ise of suffocation, they i E. Pinkhtm's Yege tt is especially adapted 9UI Newspaper SCsMs'a Ran efi, at Times and Tribune office. V KRAZY KOBNEB. Gold and Blaek. • "Ked” Chaney—l’m no tough Joe, I’ve got muscles in j&y eye-brows. ••Bill" Brown—Aw, shut up. I sham ppa ray bead with broken bottles. Woman's best asset is mail's imagin ation. ~j, A health suggestion—Never keep a parrot near the telephone. 'Tis better to have kissed and caught a cold than never to have kissed at all. Lives us football men remind us ’Tis of glory that we slug. Aud departing leaJe behind us Hand prints on another mug. ‘‘A woodpecker sat on a freshman's head And started awn.v to .drill, drilled away for half n -day, And finally burst his bill." Miss MacLaughlin (op history class) “Hubert, why was it so hard for Maine and Massachusetts to assert tlieir inde pendence V’’ Hubert: “Because it’s so cold up there." Mr. McLeod: “My wife lias gone to the West Indies A. Hoover: “Jamaica?" Mr. McLeod: “Oil, no, she wanted to g °” 1 KRAZY KOBNEB. - Gold ahd Black. High School Library and Songs. “Freckles"—Otto Chaney. “The Flirt"—Viola Hitt. “The Depth Call”—Exams. , “Country Bred" —The Freshman. “The Scamp”—Billy Brown. “U Hinton” —Mr. MpT-wd “The Moore. “The Clinging Vine" —Lewis Smart. “The She'k”—Jit Liueberger. “Thorns nnd Orange Blossoms"—The teachers. “Pigs Ts Pigs"—Robert Peck. “The Call of the Wild” —Football. "Whispering"—Study Period. "Angel Child"—Hubert Morris. "Running Wild”—The Seniors. “The Songster”—Mr. Doyle. “That Black-headed Gal” —Miss Mac- Laughlin. The hardest labor is em'orced idle ness. One active virtue is worth fen absent vices. » MADE THE SAME AS THIRTY YEARS AGO FOR 30 years physicians have prescribed Gtiae’s P&pto-Man gan to their patientWiecause. in addition to its other invigorating ingredients, it Contains a form of iron which is readily absorbed, does not upset the stomach or affect the teeth, and is thoroughly efficient as a tonic and blood enricher. Get « bottle and begin to take it. At your druggist s, to both and tablets. Free Trial Tablets the health-building Value oT Gude'a Pepto-Mamma, send for gen erous Trial Package of TfSteU. Send no SU&Y. Gude’s Pepto-Mangan jbm^^%d^oodßvddier Ouch! Aching Joints, /Rub Rheumatic Pain Rub Pain right out with small trial bottle of old “Bt. Jacobs Oil.” Rheumatism is “pain” only. Not one case in fifty requires inter nal treatment Stop drugging I Rub soothing, penetrating ,f St.~Jacobs Oil” right into your sore, stiff, aching joints, and relief comes instantly. “St Jacobs Oil” is a harmless rheumatism iniment which never disappoints and cannot bum the skin. Limber up ! Quit complaining I Get a small trial bottle of old, honest “St Jacobs Oil” at any drug store, qpd in just a moment you’ll be free from rheumatic pain, soreness and stiffness. Don’t suffer I Relief awaits you. “St. Jacobs Oil” is just as good for sci atica, neuralgia, lumbago; bqckacbe, sprains. TO DARKER HAIR * APPtfSAGE TEA Look Young! Bring Baek Its Natural Color, Gloss and i Attractiveness Common garden sage brewed into a ■eavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streamed and faded hair beauti fjlly dark and luxuriant Just a few Implications will prove a revelation if your bait is ft (ling, streaked or gsay. Mixing ttte Sage Tea and Sulphur rec ipe at home, though, ij troublesome -An easier way is to get a bottle of Wyeth’* .Sage and Sulphur Compound at any drug store all ready for use. \V-KS oW-tSme recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients. While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire retain our youthful appearance and attractiveness. By darkening ybur "hair with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, because it does it sojpitunifya so evenly.- you-just darape* a sponge or soft brush with if and draw this through your hair, taking one small straga et a time; by morning all gfly hairs have disappeared, and, after a«> other application or two, your heir be comes beautifully (feck, glossy, soft and '.in... % Not Only a Labor of Love, bat a Great, Serious National Responsibility By BRIG. GEN. MILTON F. DAVIS, ia New York Herqi#. HISTORY, will bear me out when I &a,y that me are the most war like nation on earth; at the same time the most unmilitary. This is a natural result of our national life—of the individual ity of our forefathers, Indian wars and long-lasting Western settlement. We are ever ready to fight at the drop 1 of the hat, but never ready to come under military discipline. Individuality, personal initia tive und personal independence are our national characteristics. The state ment may be certified by the fact that we have had 104 calls to arms since 1776. N We should grasp {he fact that trained manhood is the basic factor of national defense, and thpt the nation will be secure in proportion as every citizen recognizes his responsibility and doqs his bit. National strength is the underlying principle of-national growth, and to fulfill the mental, moral and physical fitness of our people are .the three graces of better'eitizenship. TYe are not greatly interested in ourselves; we are now sitting on the back porch of life contemplating of a more or less perfect day. But we Are very much interested in the oncom ing generations of our nation, and who shall say but that bn them rests the future of tjTe world. The chronicles of recent years would certainly •0 indicate. orld barriers' have disappeared. Our daily shopping is done in the international market place, where our own wares predominate. We are tho creditor, nation of earth. We have five-eighths of all the gold known to exist. We have tg look only forty years to see where we shall be forty years hence and to realize in a measure that the responsibilities of our eons will be greater than ours have been. Their 1 preparation is in our hands. It is not only a labor of love, but a great, serious notional re qpbnsibility. * M I Am Like Those Gladiators. I Fight, but Not as One Who Beats the Air” By REV. F. E. HOPKINS, Presbyterian Minister, Michigan City, Ind. W hat is the matter with our teachers of morals that they should hold up as magnificent examples of the glory of being physically fit such Bible heroes as Samson and then wish to throw Dempsey and Firpo into jail? Why do they denounce war and applaud the pacifist aud doughface. It was by the power of his muscles that Samson, the prophet, lifted the gdtes of Gaza and paid the Philistines for their injustice in punish ing hi? sin by making their temple a heap of ruins. It was St. Paul who said, after watching the Olympian athletic games of his day: “I am like those gladiators. I fight, but not as one who beats the air.” Bvery man, woman, and nation should be so fit no one would dare tp kick them. The men who can silence machine guns and drive in a squad of enemy soldiers like so many ducks, and the vnan who can for five minutes close the eyes of a giant to the beauties of the Hudson, the Palisades, and the Statue of Liberty, as Dempsey did to Firpo, gives tbs Borld of normal mSn and women a'healthy, holy thrill. ■* i ‘We~Bave Been Sacrificing Women and Children on Altar of Mammon” Bjt SAMUEL GOMPERB, American Federation of Labor. We have been sacrificing women and children in this country on the altar of Maihmon, but the Conscience of the people of America has been awakened. Child life of the country must be considered at all hazards. To say that the Constitution of the United States is impotent to protect the children of our time is begging the question. The eonrts have declared that laws which were pitted by the congress of the country upon the demand of the people, to protect minors from undue exploitation, are void. That the people, through" their representa tives, cannot pass a law to protect the child life of our time, is to lay the greatest indictment" against our competency. This movement of ours, commonly known as a labor movement, is born pf necessity.. It is the result of conditions, born in hunger by hun ger—hunger for better food, hunger for better shelter, hunger for rest< hunger for recreation, hunger for music, the arts, literature—all that foes to make up a better and fuller life. Angling Alwaya a Problematic Sport; Ways of Fishes Mysterious By DR. HENRY VAN DYKE, in New York Herald. —■■■u Angling has alwajß been, a problematic sport. The ways of fishes 4rq mysterious. Who knows where the salmon schools spend their win ters? Why the black bass will refuse every temptation for a week and then suddenly, on an ordinary day, bite greedily at almost any old lure ? Why the rainbow trout planted in England thrive for a couple es years and then vanish away like the Snark that was a Boojum? Why the same fish planted in similar waters in New Zealand stay, and multiply, and grow enormous ? Where the tilefish go when they disappear for ten years a time ? Moreover, each individual fish of all t*he game species sets a particu lar problem for his would-be captors. He has bis own prejudices and peculiarities about rising, his own way of playing and his personal tricks of escape. No two fish are just alike. That is the charm of angling. You m%y say that every big salmon or trout caught on fine taakle means the solution of a new and separate problem. Cultural Education for Young Man Should Precede Technical Training By COL. WILLIAM M. STARRETT, in New York Herald. Among the large number of young men constantly seeking an open ing in the professions end in business, the percentage that 1 have seen who possess the valuable asset termed personality; is atoall. For this reason, I have come to the conclusion that a cultural educa tion should precede technical training, or should at least, be combined with it- It seems to me that a young man’s chances are greatly improved by attractive presence, and surely, a certain amount of culture is • great aid to g pleasing personality. By this, I mean, for example, th* 1 tw&mcally edjucaleij should have the best phsaifye'knowledge es the English language, and an appreciation of the amenities of life. Many youug men who possess a g6od technical education use aston ishing English; 1 their grsmmqr is bad and their diction is often deplorable. l In short, this side of thrir education appears to lmve been sadly ucgtccted »* frWW* t 0 it* conclusion. ( o' ’ » THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE BOYHOOD HEROES As Rare as a Dodo L * ni ™ducing ‘i 10 Fessa from ' Madagascar. It was presented to the Loidon zoo. and was caught only altar jljWMrch lasting _tw*yeaj:sj;qr t one of .tha soecia, ~- r - ONE YEAR FREE We Will Give The Progressive Farmer —and— The Concord Tribune Both For One Year For Only $5 The Price of The Tribune Alone (This applies to those who get their mail on the rural routes or to any point in North Carolina outside the City of Concord. To subscribers in Concord and outside North Carolina the price is $0.00.) » The Progressive Farmer is the greatest farm paper published and every farmer should have it. This offer will be good for 60 days only, from June 15th, 1923. This offer is open to both new and old sub scribers. If you are already taking The Tribune all you have to do is to pay up to date and $5.00 more for another year and the Progressive Farm er will be sent you a whole year absolutely free of charge. If you are already paid in advance to The Tribune, just pay $5 for another year, your sub scription will be so marked and we will send you the Progressive Farmer a full year. Address THE TRIBUNE, Concord, N. C. PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Nov. 15, 1923, edition 1
7
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