& !9tyer Qoas** on IWete. American 0\^ied, Enttrri^.l f, *^ycr Tablets of Aspirin" Offer Relief—^with Safetj^ Fbr Headache Colds Neuralgia Grippd Toothache Influenzal Colds JEarache Achy Joint; Rheumatism Neuritis Lumbago Pain! Pain'f Adults—Tal^e one or tv6 *'9agr«r TaUels of AagUn** :inth water. If necessary, re> peat dose three times a day^ Ao^rtn the trade imric of Bayer : «f MoaoaceticaddesUr of SaU^liai^ Bi^ the Bayer padtaget <«]]r. CC^«eat padcage—AIm laiger aiM« / Philip’s Bal(ery WHY BUY BREAD OUT OF TOWN WHEN YOU CAN GET MORE BREAD AND BETTER BREAD FOR THE SAME £ MONEY AT YOUR HOME I - BAKERY? Philip’s Bakery CALOMEL SALIVATES AND MAKES YOU SICK Acts Like Dynamite on a Slug gish Liver and You Lose a Day*s Work. There’s no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating calomel when a few cents buys a large bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone—a perfect substitute for calo- ■d. It is a pleasan^ regetable liquid which wfll start your liver just as surely as calomel, but it doesn’t make you sick and can not salivate. Children and grown folks can take Dodson’s Liver Tone,. because it is per fectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is mercury and attacks your bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel today and you will feel weak, sick and nauseated tomorrow. Uon’t lose a day’s work. Take a spoonful ol Dodson’s Liver Tajne instead and you will wake up feeling'l great. No more biliousness, constipation, sluggishness, headache, coated tongue or sour stomach. Your druggist says if you don’t find Dod son’s Liver Tone acts better than horrible calomel your money is waiting for you.— Advertisement. dJm PREVENTATIVE MEblCINE ^ It is ssid the fanetion of the Chino %se physician is not prfanarily to core disease* but to prevent its develop ment. Stance isn*t it, that tiie nation vre are w<mt to regard as asleep and antiquated in its ideas and mental processes should so long ago have grasp the right idea upon this sub* ject ^vhile the alert and progressive people of what is termed the New W<Hrld have failed to perceive the importance of stayiiur well? Have we been too busy with various and sundry things other than health? My subject today is the prevention of ty phoid fever, a disease which has had and still has a large death rate and under the most favorable circumstan ces a l<Aig period of illness and con valescence making it a most costly disease. Thanks to the labors of some devoted laboratory experts we have now a method of praventing typhoid fever. The vaccine used has passed the stage of experiment, as demonstrated by reports prior to the last war, from the American, the British, the French, the Germans, and the Japanese army authorities. / The report from the medical staffs of the army engaged in the strugngle so recently terminated confirm the findings just mentioned. There is also another side to this, namely the men concerned in these findings are entirely free from any suspision of self interest for they have no pecun iary gifin to expect in the matter such as the owners and promoters of the many patent and proprietary alleged cure alls on the market today. In contrast with the enormous fortunes accumulated l>y such products as Vick’s Pneumonia Cure, Grove’s Chill Tonic, and others too numerous to mention, the men who have develop ed and tested such potential products as diphteria antitoxine, typhoid and pneumonia vaccines are poor, yet so ready is humanity to be humbugged hat we find many advertised mixtures in every’home, and on the other hand the public is slow to avail itself of the preventative remedies that have the endorsement of the highest stand ing in the medical profession, both in attainments and integrity. The Board of Health is quite recently in receipt of a proposition from the bu reau of epidemiology in this state offering to give a complete treatment for typhoid fever immunigation at a cost of 12% cents per capita, the county commissioners, in other words the people of the county, to pay the bill. I would strongly advise accepit- ing the proposition. Very sincerely yours, W. J. WALLIS, County Health Officer. ATTENTION, METHODISTS! The Pine Grove Methodist church near Penrose, will be re-opened for worship Sunday, May 11th at four o’clock p. m. (fast time.) The public cordially invited. W. A. THOMAS, Pastor. A BREVARD REPORT Fully Corroborated and Easily Inves tigated. Do you need a good kidney medi cine. Then read the reports in these very columns of Brevard persons cur ed or benefited with Doan’s Kidney Pills. You won’t have to go far to find out if they are true. This Bre vard case is an example. Others will follow. Mrs. G. A. Condrey, Maple St., says: **Five years ago I was troubled with kidney complaint and my back was weak and sore all the time. Morn ings I felt tired and dizzy spells of ten came over me. Black specks came bitfore my eyos, too and my kidneys didn’t act ri^t. I read of Doan’s Kidney PillS and got a supply, and soon this trouble entirely disappear ed.” Price 60c at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kdney PiUs—the same tiiat Mrs. Condrey had. Foster-Milburn Co:, Mf^., Buffalo, N. Y. ^ ■J OU wW find all tbCM mwoK io. tH# sealed paekaiMS-bat look for the aaaie becaoM It to your proteclleii aairiMt iaferior ImltaMoiit. Just as tiw sealed packase to nro*ec> tloo asaiost im parity. SeULCD TIGHT KEPT RIGHT The Flavor Lasts! (Posed hf Mmrr PiekferU Your Village And Mine VV I ^ I G L Y JUICY FRUIT (HI VS i \ f, L M It is just a typical American vil lage—perhaps yours or the one in the next county. It has two churches and a hotel and there is the "cornor’' where the men gather after supper to consider politics and “the state of the Union.” Its populatioa ia about 2.000. When war was declared it gave its sons with a glad heart, and they marched away bravely—^many with a sob in the throat, perhaps, but with a splendid vision guiding their feet. From the training camp those boys went to France and were moved up into the batUe line. The Hun was making a desperate effort to destroy civilization in a bloody drive on Paris. Then— The richest man in the village met the hotel barber and they gripped hands in silence. Their two sons lay dead in the Argonne. The village butcher boy—^red-head ed and Irish—smiled for the last time. He died fighting that freedom might not perish. The town’ii Bean Bram- mel—he had never amounted to much—won the Crolz de Querre but lost both eyes. Oas claimed the son of the widow who lived in the little green cottage. At first she could not speak when she received the brief telegram. Then —^"John was all I had. I hoped he would come back. If I had two sons I would give them too.** That was all. But— America as a whole never felt the real hand of war—not as France felt it—nor as England—^nor evMi as Can ada. Why? Because our dollars stopped the war. They made possible thoee tre mendous preparations for a long war that result^, in a short war. Never was such a stupendous assemblage of munitions. Germany wilted. Thou sands of millions dollars were saved. But best of all, tens of thou sands of American boys were saved. America prepared on faith. Amer ica holda its dollars cheaper it valued its sons. The war is over. Vtctory is oara. America escaped the frightful burden of debt which would have been oura if the war had lasted two years long* or. We still have those dollars in our pockets. And the boys are coming home. But the debts the government did contract—the debts that won the war —must be paid. They w« be paid. America has pledged Its faith, and the faith of America haa never been questioned. We are now asked to lend the gov* emment some of those unpaid dollar? we still have ia our pockets, and. tc secure the loan. Victory Liberty Bonds will be issued—the safest in the world. Then let our hearts—and our purses —say how thankful we are that, per ^pa, half a million American boys Were saved. HE HAD THE GRIT THAT WON THE WAR Carter Glass, secretary of the treas- Ufy, copied the following note, among others, from the note book of a Red Cross nurse when he was in Prance; -One boy I shall always remember. His right shoulder was practieally shot away and he had a big wound in his baek and one in his le^ft eye. But he sat straight up and wouldn*t let anybody help him. lie didn’t say a word while they pulled oft the tight elinging gauze from the red, raw, wet flesh that quivered ia spite of him. When the first wound was finished all he said was: “Do you think I could rest a minnte. Doe. before you do the second one?* **Red, raw, wet flesh”—American flesh. It was not yellow. Think of that when yon are asked to buy Vic tory Uberty bonds, yon who think you have done enough. \ First American Ftafl to Enter Qermany With' Our Army of OeeiHMtioii. Tho liberty Loan will fay tiio biUs maintaining our Ezped^ tionary forces ^ovonoaa. (IUus|i»tkHi copyrighted by Coomltteo on yeblle totormatlee llrom'Undenirood A l?n««wtf^ N. T.) / ' TtNSLErS MARKH Has What You Want in FRESH MEATS and CURED MEATS FISH and OYSTERS Vegetables, Cliickais, Eggs and Produce The Very Best in These Lines and Sells for Less All tlie Time TINSLEYIMARKET Prompt Delivery Phone 27 Steila-Vitae THE GUABANIEED TONIC FOR WOMEN Stelia-Vitae has been in maat» fnl use in the treatment of thoeedisesses peculiar to womea for moce ttao a tUrd of a century. For nearly fen years it has been sold under a plainj positive g^iarantee to benefit. Less than one bot tle out every one thousand sold has beoi refunded for, and evenr citfm for a refund has been satlsfledL Thousands of letters like this praising Stella-Vitae and tcdUng of benefit to suffering women have been received. ric^ B. n. Rosadl, of Mill Bprings, K. C.tgratdfnlly writes ns as follows: *1 was in a most wietdied condi- J:: tion; had palpitation of the heart and wouldsweUana bloatin a most distressLog way., When I began uang 5tella-Vitae I wa^ed 108 pounds. NowlwdehloS. lam more tfaanldy^ jhto I can ever tell you for the good this w<»i- deiful medicmcfbas done me.” Mrs Russell was'' period, the “chan^’’ gratitude for the blesses understood and appred, woman who reads ner If Stelia-Vitae has proi snfiferinff womanhood," approaching their first women appcoa<diing't childbirth, to women ap ‘qhangeorlife.” SteBa-1 3ns the femiJe organsj cKularity in the me No risk of Ides is fezing woinaa who m ourjguanyifeM of i All dEsleiBSto $te_ .’etnm year naoa^ i yen, Don% ^ ^ - For Safe hr Gii.t Bmwrdf N. C* . H'e/ks/n I GLAZENER^S TWO STORES^ FOR Shoes, Dry Goods and Cloth^. The cheapest stores in the state. We cut l^the price and sell the goods» Follow the crowd to Hendersonville N. C. Vs Friiit Ymnr leBiHs _ it comes to netti effective printiQ|£ ly Kind we wlU itee to 0ve you • Sm

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