Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Feb. 19, 1925, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WEEK'S EVENTS IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA. TION AND THE WORLD BRIEFLY TOLD ROUND AB0UT_THE WORLD A C*nd?nMd R?cortf Of Happening* Of lnt?rMt From All Point* Of THo World Foreign ? Greece has. appealed to the league of nations against the action of Tur key in expelling the Most Rev. Con stantinos. ecumenical patriarch of the Grek Catholic church, from Constanti nople. Considerable alarm is felt in Lon don over dispatches to morning news paper that a big liner had gone ashore on the Essex coast and was sending 1 v.p distress signals near Walton. Dr. Anton Hooflo. former minister | of posts and the Clerical member in | the Marx-Stresemann German cabinet, j was recently arrested after a cross- j examination by the public prosecutor. The finance committee of the cham ber of deputies, in agreement with Pre mier Herriot. appointed a subcommit tee charged with the duty of studying the question of the inter-allied debts ? from the French viewpoint. Premier Stanley Baldwin expects an inter-allied debt conference to con vene at London within three months. Around the table would sit represen tatives of France. Italy. Jugo-Slavia. ! Houmania. Greece and Portugal, with a Briton in the chair. The total in debtedness of these six nations to j Great Britain is 56.3TO.OO.O.OOO. Regret is expressed in British dip lomatic circles over America's with drawal from the international opium conference at Geneva. It is contend ed that the American delegation with drew just when the conference was j on the verge of attaining success. Greece has appealed to the league of nations to compel Turkey to per mit the expelled ecumenical patriarch of the Greek Catholic, church to return to Constantinople and the control of the patriarchate. Premier Herriot of France has pro rosed to a plenary joint session of the .chamber of deputies foreign relations j and finance ?commit lees the creation of a commission composed of fourteen j members to study a settlement of the : inter-allied debt. The storm over the Turkish expul- j sion of the head of the ?Ir.ek Catho- J lie church is subsiding. In an effort i to prevent a recurrence of the quarrel 1 over the patriarchate in Constantino- ' pie Greece plans to demard an inter- j rational guarantee against further [ Turkish interference. China, following the I'nited States ? has dropped from the international j opium conferr.ee. thus producing an other dramatic situation which had its climax with a vioU-Dt attack on Ste phen G. Porter, head of the American delegation by J. J. Loudon. Dutch min ister in Paris, who is known as the master diplomat of the conference, j Washington ? There is still a chance for a buck j private in the army. Brig. Gen. Camp- ! beH King, who joined to s-;e the! world as a private, has been appoint ed "o be t.ew assistant chief of staff of th>" army. General Kin;; is a close j friend of General Mines, successor to General Pershing as chief of staff, with whom he served in France. Investigation of alleged drinking by midship.'.. en at Annapolis naval a cad emv has been ordered by Secretary of the Navy "Wilbur. This action was ' taken on complaint of four ministers at Annapolis, Three midshipmen have been discharged this year for drinking or possessing liquor. Secre tary Wilbur declined to give any de rails regarding t-he complaints or tin program of the inquiry. ?Tile Washington committer* hand Ting the city's plans for President Coolidge's inauguration has decided to reduce all expenditures to a minimum and abandon proposals to erect any stands along the. route of march. Deportation of all aliens convicted of violating tho national prohibition, narcotic or white slave laws is pro vided in a bill passed by the house. The vote was L'L5 to The measure was framed by Representative Hola day of Illinois. Republican. It now goes to the senate. ? The German commercial treaty was ratified by the senate with reserva tions understood to be not wholly ac ceptable to the state department! The principal reservation would reserve to congress the sole authority to put into force preferential tariff duties in fa vor of American shipping at any time within one year after exchange of rat ifications. Repudiation by congress of recom mendation by the interstate commerce commission for retention of the Pull man surcharge was urged in the sen ate by- Senator Smith, Democrat, SoutL Carolina, chairman of the interstate commerce committee. The first effects of President Cool idge's economy program became evi dent with the announcement that a large number of shipping board em ployes will be given their walking pa pers during the month and that sal ary cuts totaling a million dollars wl' soon be made. A dispatch from Anchofage, Alaska, says that 480,000 units of diphtheria antitoxin are being relayed from Ne nana to Nome by dog teams. The antitoxin has already arrived at Nu lato, 80 miles west of Ruby, ou the Yukon river. Owing to a shortage of funds, work at the navy yards on both the Pacific and Atlantic coasts will be curtailed beginning March 1. Production of petroleum in the Unit edStates durjpg 1924 totaled approxl mate 714,000,000 barrels, at 2 per cent decrease from the 1923 figure the geological survey says in a pre liminary estimate. The proposed "Nickle Plate" rail road merger, which suddenly swept j the Van Swearingen brothers of Cleve | land ? two comparatively young and unknown men? into the class of pow [ erful railroad magnates, may become ! the object of senatorial investigation^ Senator Howell of Nebraska. Republi can, has asked the investigation of this consolidation. Domestic ? Counsel began their arguments in the trial of Ned Harvey of Orange. Texas, charged with being a double slayer, according to a dispatch re ceived :it I-ake Charles, La., by air plane from Cameron: I.a. Harvey tes tified he killed A. A. Flyrd ol' Neder | land. Texas, and John Springer of Lake Charles, officials of a trapping company, in self defense. Rian Tra han. first witness for the defense, was I placed in jail for contempt of court ! when hi> refused to answer several | questions. An order to show cause on Pebru- J nry 24 why ten million dollars' worth ! of stock of the Southern Cotton Oil j company, subsidiary of the iVrginia- ! Carolina Chemical company, should j not be sold for $S,S75.000 has been is- \ sued to the stockholders of the com- ; pany by Federal Judge Runyon in Nwe York City. With the release of Ixniis Fish. 19 year-old Canton, Ohio, student at the Ohio state university. City Prosecutor j John J. Chester, investigating the mys- i terious deaths of two university stu- ! dents by strychnine poisoning, an- | nounced that Fish was not implicated ! in the affair and that he had been the victim of unfortunate circum stances. . , j At De'sMoines. Iowa, the other day. | a bank robber was shot and possibly I fatally wounded and his two compan ions cau/rht when the trio attempted to hold up the Hooneville Savings bank. Charges of incom potency and ineffi ciency preferred against Or. Spight McDowell, president of. the Alabama polytechnic institute, by alumni groups of Birmingham and Montgomery are ; expected to be presented to the board 1 of trustees of the institution at the office of Governor P.randon in Mont gomery. Joan London Abbott, daughter of the late Jack London, author, has been granted a divorce from Park Abbo't. The three-year-old son. Park London Abbott, was given to the mother. Dorothy Ellington, Ifi. confessed slayer of her mother, pleaded not guilty when arraigned in superior court at San Francisco on the charge of murder. W. J. Oliver of Knoxville. Tennes see. is charged in a bill filed in the chancery court recently by the South ern Surety company, for transferring a draft of one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars, to his wife. Three life-terms and another prison er serving a nine-year sentence es-'j caped from the Arkansas state farm at Tucker. Having begun his Wait street, ca reer at the age of 16 as a stock run ner at $?; a week. David U. Page, at the a.ge of 41. becomes head of the New York curb market. Three hundred cases growing out of the armed march of men from the union coal fields of southern West Vir ginia against the non-union IvORan re gion in 1921. were dismissed by Judge J. M. Woods at Charleston, W. Va. The judge decided the evidence to j convict was lacking. While Mrs. Clemens Ciucci lay at a j Richmond. Va.. hospital in a serious condition as the result of two ham mer blows on her head, police follow : ed every available clue to apprehend her assailant. William C. Durant, motor manufac turer and stock operator, is credited by Wall street with having made about two and a half million dollars during the last few days in the rise of Unit ed Statees cast iron pipe. ? After Graham Baiighn. inmate of the j Atlanta. Ga.. penitentiary, had testi fied that lie had been granted a pa role which previously had ben denied, after swearing out a warrant for A. E. Sartain, former warden at the prison on December 23. 1924, the prosecution introduced records containing a grand j jury resolution recommending paiole j to the federal parole board. The bulk of the estate of the late Julius Fleischman. yeast magnate, es timated at from fifty million to sixty ; million dollars, is left to his children, | the filing of his will in New York City i discloses. He left a bequest of $200. | 00 for charitable and educational pur I poses. ..... The will of Frederick M. Halstead, wealthy Richmond, Va.. eccentric, who ? left $400,000 for the erection of a Con | federate monument, has been broken by court action. The money will be distributed among the dead man's 1? , gal heirs. NEW SAD CHECK BILL IS PASSED ACT MAKES THOSE GIVING BAD CHECKS GUILTY OF MIS DEMEANOR. After repeated efforts, dating back for several terms, there has been pass ed in the general assembly a "worth less cheek" bill, introduced by Repres entative Matthews of Mecklenburg and sponsored by the North Carolina .Mer chants' assoei.it ion. Til's iiili. iw\v law. ] rovidos. ain.vn'g i other things, that any -person. lirin or co i cratii r. \v?r<> shall draw. make, niter or ie'ivor to another any cluck or signed or purporting to be signed by sin ii perst.il. linn or ccrpotv a tit avd (!r,iv.n on any hank of <ie | o:-y f.'r thtv payment of mon"y or its i- ; ; ; 1 \ ah -it. and shall a:, the time I of mak';:'jr. dit.wiug. uttering tit deliv ( r iig su'ch (heck or draft, .have- ivnif licie:;! .'ends on deposit in or. credits with such bank cr depository wiih which to | iiy the check <c < I r;;f t upon its presentation and who shall fail to provide' sii; h funds ur credits shall be' guilty of a misdemeanor and 1-e lined or imprisoned. is the discretion of ; li ? court. ? l! is provided, however, that in any ease where a prosecution is begun un der this act the defendant shall have a right, upon application to the trial court before the tcial and after pay ment into court of the amount in ques tion, to have the action abated and to show that he had an account in the bank on which the check is drawn within thirty days prior to the issu ance of the check, and that the check was not drawn with fraudulent intent The ward "credits". shall be constru ed to be an agreement with the bank or depository .upon which the check is drawn for it:- payment upon presen tation. Fire Protection Bill Killed. Sherwood P/rockwell. deputy, fire marshal, made an impassion <d plea bef-ote the H. ast (\>mmitteo or. Insur ance Wednesday tor some la.w to safe- , guard hospitals freui tire, but to no i vail. Th<.' committee after prol.;i:?:ed consideration of a bill that wovthl re quire fire escapi s. stairways bir.lt s ? as not" to bei.ome tire Hues, and oilier ' like precautions voted to k:ll the bill. The mea>ure has been' bfore the islatuve for a monthr It was introduc ed for the State Department ot Iiisu;v ; a'sce liv Ker: esenlative De-ifiJiger. | ? i lleiids el iio>p;?aiS in several c.i .vs .'i ? j p:>sed the me: sure on the ground <<"' ^ ,xp.on.?e. Tie' first bill provided for fireproof hespitais. as far as, p.ract!- ! cable. giving two years to make them fireproof. but this was considered drastic. Surfer ng Causss Pain. (i, ldsbere. The st ry of the terri ble suffering tlin : Mrs. !vey Wooli":!, tin* Oak View community, suff- red from the time -h" was horribly vur-.ied Sat it: day. .fan. :!-t. until she diVtl or. Thtii sda y. Feb. .>. has be< ii touml, i - lier f:ie:ids and is a diary of fortitude, patience and hope. 'the - '.-.ry oi h r suffering was evidently written on her d( a th bed ami states in part: "When 1 came in from the kitchen and saw that the fire had gone down in the tire place. 1 put on some wood and then turned around to give the' chiidreri i some cough syrui My ' wo-\ eai -old child said ?Look. Mama' and when 1 f turned around my skirt was on lire. ; 1 tried to -mother the blaze with my. sweater and when 1 could not do this ! screamed and begged for help to | c,eme and mid Katherine to run for Mis. Kmerson. our neighbor. I kept i the baby, away from me with one hand and tried to put out th?s lire with the i other., ! prayed continually to the Lord to save r.ie that my habv might ? be spared. With evert h ins burned off ? of me but a binding around my waist 1 vvciipiied a coat around me. took the baby in my arms and started to the Kmersoti's. 1 wimhl go a little way. then lie down and roll over and beg for help. I finally got to the Enter sou's- and f ?ii face down oh the floor The doctor then came and did what | he could for me. 1 want to live to : raise my little children and to work for my Saviour." It was the last re quest of Mrs. Wooten that her story be broadcast that it may be a warning to people to be careful of fire. Truck Growers Join Association. Wilmington? The. Wilmington Co operative Truck Growers Association, comprising a majority of the local growers aligned itself with a nation wide co-operative organization when the board of directors meeting in Wrightsbc.ro, formally authorized the signing of a marketing agreement with the Federated Fruit and Vegetable Growers. The agreement was signed to take effect immediately, by L. N. Johnston, president, asd W. C. Mont gomery, manager. HOW TO KEEP WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of "HEALTH" a ? (?, 1925. Western" Newspaper Union.) IDIOSYNCRASY IDIOSYNCRASY. This is a long word. What does it mean? It stands for something which we know exists hut no one knows what it is. A familiar proverb which goes back to the old Creek writers is that "One man's meat is another man's poison." This is a terse way of saying that a food which will agree with and nour ish. one person will produce injurious effects on another. The food is just the same in both instances, so the difference must be in the individuals. What is the difference? No one knows. Yet strawberries.. whh*h most people-, enjoy, will cause lii.usea and vomiting and a severe rash in some cases. I recall n patient who could not eat lobster. Her fri? u?l< knew it and never offered it to her. 'taking lunch at a howl with friends, a salad was ordered which contained a small amoiini of lobster meat, although this was not known to any of .lie party inside of ten minutes after eating the salad, this lady was taken violently ill; By the time she could be taken to a room and undressed, her body was covered from head to foot with a . vivid scarlet irruption. - The other members of the party, who ate ?ex actly' the same salad, showed no symptoms at all. Certain drugs produce unusual ef fects on some people. Others are un pleasantly affected by the o.lors of certain (lowers or the presence of cer tain animals. At a recent meeting of Cernian scientists. Professor Dorr of Basel dis cussed this subject, which has he ccnie or.? ,,f pr.tctie.il import nice on account of the different way in which individuals are affected by animal serums. It has been found that the various individual forms oi scns.tiveness possess the same peculiarities; A ?person who is unusually sensitive to one material is sensitive to thai ma terial alone; that is, a person who cannot eat lobster can oat oysters and fish with immunity. A person who is sensitive to strawberries can ??at apples, grapes, plums or pears without any- discomfort. Another pe culiarity is that the symptoms' caused in a sensitive person have nothing whatever to do with the effects, thai, the same substance produces in .nor mal individuals. The third peculiar ity is that symptoms produced' by any of these objects in any individual who is sensitive to them are all alike. This is also true- of animal serums. Probably hay fever is I lie best-known example of such sensitiveness. No one knows why certain persons are sensitive to certain hhjocts. Not knowing the Cause. however, lias not prevented sciehiitic men from giving- these peculiar conditions a name nearly as long as the old one. ! Cases of -idiosyncrasy are now said to be caused by anaphylaxis. This does .not incrc; .se our know ledge, but it gives us one long word i.o take, the place of another. EYESIGHT VARIES WITH AGE \A7n,:-N ?v,,ur ''yes the best ? At " * what a i'e docs the average per son see clearest? The I'nited States :? public health service has endeavored to answer this ipiesiion by a careful examination of tlie c\es of ten tliou | sand persons. Half of .'hem were ! school boys from six to sixteen and i half of them were working men from j eighteen tip. The boy* were public | school pupils in South' I'arelina. Mary | land, Delaware and New York and j the workmen were employees in post | ojjiees, in glass, pottery, foundry. | steel, chemical, cigar gas and cement i industries in various parts of the i Cnittfiil States. j -This number is large enough to in I dude every variety, of sight defect, j -What were the results of this large j number of examinations? The public health experts found that tlie percentage (that is, the nun* her out of every one hundred persons examined) of persons with normal vision increased with age from six .years up to eighteen years, after which it declined and that the rate of decline was much more rapid after forty-live than before. 'litis would indicate that in chil dren with good eyesight, school work was not as hard a strain on the eyes as different forms of work taken up after leaving school. The investigation also showed that if tlie eves were markedly defective, school work still further weakened them aid that the percentage of per sons w th markedly defective vision increast d steadily after six years of age. i le rate of increase was more rapid during school age than in the early ytfars of industrial work. The [percentage of persons' with moderately defective vision decreased during tlie school uacs, then increased from twenty to titty and then declined again. The general conclusion from these facts would seem to be that if one has good eyes, school work improves the vision but that. In persons with poor eyesight, school work is harder than industrial work, probably be cause persons having very poor eyes naturally select work which does not require acute vision. In any case, the eyesight is best at about eighteen years. u COST ID STATE MEMBERS DRAW MORE THAN $25, OOO FROM SEVEN BODIES IN TWO YEARS. Raleigh. Norih fa rolina paid $ 1 r?4.or?:t.os dnr ing (lie ]>;: st two years for seven spe cial commissioners including the per diem and expenses of members and all | necessary expenses. .More lhan half of the amount, or $Mt.404.66. was pa:d for ! two commissions, the Bowie Riilroad i commission and the I 'rice. Water house and Company audit. The members of the c immiss:on ro ceived in per <!i< in and expenses ?LT?. 12/1:14 of the <i me;: nt. of this amount, the m< lii .ers of the Ship and Waii-r ; Commission received the larg-'si ! , ametif;:. Jo:; iling $6.!lS7. 12. Tie in m- ; ' hers of I. and Tenacy Comm :--i' n v- ' ; ceiveii o.'itt sr. and the members of i ! the S f ** I ? Prison Inves' igatin;: '" lauiiiS- : '? sien $ ! SIT. :t !. I f-'ornn ?' S"nnior I) !?'. (J.b's who r \ed a:= a member of thrv-e of iiie com- i missions received a lar-'T amount ? than an;- o'h< r person serving, total in.u Senator W. I th re ceived the next largest anion: i with | $2,131.44 plus his part of i 1 .6iil spent ; by the members of the special legis j lative iyv( si 'gating committee wb :? li ! i secured ti'e I'rice. Waterhause at.d i Company audit. Representative I) r McKiniiiiii who served on only one commission, the Prison Investigating i Committee, received l he third late st i amount. Sl.734.fil. The r>4 memiiers of j the seven ci ni missions who drew on the tro usury received an average <?] 1 $46f.24. The and Tenaey Commission cost ' the State a. total of $7.3N3.f>6 of which $6.o.i0>."? went to the members in per diem and expenses. Mr. Giles receiv ed the largest amount, $2,166. IS. which exceeded the amount paid any other member by <?72f> 02. The Legislative Examining Commit tee, which looked into the condition of the Stale treasury and reported a de ficit ot around J6.onfi.ftn0 last June. < ost \ the State J17.671.ftS, only $4.Vi.l0 of the sum. however, was received by the Clumbers (>t the commission. | Tiie. Slate Prison Investigating Commission which has not > -i p-pori ? cd to tin General. Assembly has cos! i tctfl ci 0S.1 4 et which j I I went to the members. P. T. McK'n-i rion rf - t iveo $!.734.f>l f ? ?r his |>< r d:* m and ( xper.se s while Major \\ . (. . Heath rec< ived $l.fi33.03. Tiie National Park Commission has; spent ?l>Cr. 14 of which I went : to the members. Senator Mark Squires ' n ceivt d the largest amount with1 i'- The other six members re-! ceived it. get her $i>r. 1 .66. Only ;!i2:!.tl of the $4!?. 747.04 -pint, by Howie Railroad coin-mission went to members. Major \\ . C. Heath j rec eived ?.W.-!1 for his pi r diem and ? ? exp? r.s( s. Tii ? Sbip ar.d Water Transportation Comin .-s oti which investigated the j pert terminals proposal cost the Stat* j ilfi.SL'n -17. Of this amount ???.!?** 7.42 j went to thn memiiers of the coinmis j sicn. C. K. Wadde'.l receiving $1,266.77 and H I1. Carroll. .$1,266 S6 of t h- ? tola! spent '? >' the J.iemi' l's. (If tile $.*>.!??"> 1 .6 ' s]l' lit by the ( eyn i miss'.- ;i r It-indexing the ? ?ro ?il: dated Statutes only $161.72 went to, the ii!'. ml < rs. Metiibi .rs of the Sanat riuni hives- | tig; ting Commission received only | ;;t:n."i of the ?t?.lt:tS.V5 spent. . Tiie total spent bv 'lie present P. id- ; pit C.isiaii i'sion is l^.il of which' $2,40vb" went to tiie members. The following ns-eiii'bers of t h ? ? var ions itommissions received more than Jl.OOo: D. P. (tiles, j - ? . 2 "? ^'54; W . C. j Ileath. i2.131.44: I). P. McKinnon. $1.- j 734. .">1; I>. lb Carroll. $1.26f>>6; E Wadde'.l. >1.208.77: and 7. I.. Gwyn. ?1. 441.16. Tiie following members of tiie com missions received more than $.'?"?/ j ri'.eh. C C. Taylor. $f>.vV7!?; W. Ii S. j Pur'- wyn. ?SSit21: \\ . U . Neul. f6i6. 33: I - C. I'owie, ?r>">2."'2; K. M. Miller. Jr.. $S'!().!?0:. C. S. Wallace. ilflS.Nl; K. I II Bellamy. $342 73; J. A. Ilrown, j S.l 7: L. ii Varser. $'.60.71: Walter! Murphy. ?.".1S.46: T. M Jenkins. $6:12.- 1 4C. 15; it h Xeal and Murphy also re ceived their part of $1.6f>l paid the j ! members of the commission which si- j cund ihe Price. Waterhouse mid i. ! Other members of the s?>ven cam ' missions are: H. M. Cox, S. II. Ilobbs. Jr.. Charles 1". liairis. Blaine Coffey. L. -I j.'. Tapp. R- T1- Vv ilson. I C. Moser. H. i M. CurraR. Harry Nettles. Mark i Squires. K. C. Brooks, 1). M. Buck. J. G. Dawson. Plato Kbbs. A. M. Scales, j J. Y. Jo.vn.er, W. A. Hart. S. J. Kverett. V. S. Bryant, W. E. Harrison. H. G j Connor. W. I> Young. A. K. Sams. K. ? S. Parker. Jr.. and George U. Boss. Virginia Leads N. C. in Roads. ! Virginia has more miles of hard sur I face highway than North Carolina ac* | cording to figures compiled by the | North Carolina and Virginia Highway j Commissions and made 'public in a i statement by Governor E. Lee Trinkle, l of Virginia. The Old Dominion, dub bed the "mud State" by Tar Heels wags, has 1,733 miles of pared roads while North Carolina, the well known good roads State, has only 1,692 ac cording to Governor Trinkle's state When You Feel a Cold Com= inc On Take' .^Laxativo tablets *0 %*., *0* - ? , T/. / 7^v to work off the cause and to fortify the 8y:;tem against an attack of Grip or Influ enza. A Safe and Proven Remedy. I'hce .'50c. The box bears i his signature __ Thousands Recommend it .'1*1 II. Y have learned from experi ence that no (natter how many other f rea t m en t s have been tried without success. Resi xiol Ointment IS often the one that brings speedy relief from chafing, ec rc.r.a cr eimilar itching, embar rassing eruptions. Its soothing healing action brought abo.it by qualities which cause it to sink deep into the pores and reach the very root of the disorder. It is absolutely harmless and does not smart or l.'irti when applied to the most irritated surfucc. To keep the :kln healthy many people hf.ve adopted the daily use of I'.e.-T>! Svap. Un surpassed for toilet and bath. All druggists sell Kesinol prod ucts. y ji -Don'. - M Jill Vru^isls jpoJP- FOltf S K\ ? '.V.'.'l " f. Pr:i'tST. A O I y "N VO -S' V.J 1 N'l v. ithout question . S-U.VK falls in tl.e ? J m il. KtV.KM A, ?'?! .TKTTKIt oretl:?T tli^rawfi. l'riee -ts. ?r tlireet f r? in y.i'ti'l Cc. Shwmii.lM-* If joy.- i.f I.:', crxtliiiu I" A. eiP.Rl>> so lo f-nouKh c.. ? AVliv not try it' V ; nr ?"(?:? |." v ? N V A v 1. 1.: !.. ? ?I.:! ,i i s. Back Bad Since the Grip? p sapped \ our r eon? t :.nt h.n k it'iIXSM'd? 'I'lu'l! Many ea?? ?? of ic.-u't of ii: kidney -? ? ften ? : ; *n i.f lilt ??? :ii>r fr mi tlic ^rip often leaws 1-.//V !<|h IN :tl"l ii. ' Help your ? i J)ihm's I' ills. thousand's ami './??ur uei'jhbcr! lias a coM < etrcniith? I )n y. ache, feel neryoti look to your kid kidney trouble .? feetious dise:i-e. hreak down iiii.it disense-ereated : That's why a <? haeknehe, lu i <1 irrecular kidney weakened kidnr Ihtati's have !. should help -ti . A North Carolina Case Mrs. J. it. I i. lips, Gul .Mi-!'. St., Sanford, N. ? says: "A e<> pettli-d on my K:. tu-ys; ??:"usiiiu i, a ureal d?al troulde witli t: 1) n e k. A d u ! steady aiho ' tl<-d in my kid neys and when Iffi/J stooped share?'-' twinges shot through my l>ack. 1 fejt tired and jr. v kidneys did not act rlKht. I usrd l>oan's rills and they relieved me " DOAN'S?" STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Fotter-Milburn Co., Mf?. Chem.. Buffalo. N. Y. Lvt'y rwfi ? Cuticura Soap Best for Baby Soap, Ointment, Talcum eoId everywhere. Saatplee fr%i of Ovtlour* Labormtorltj. D?p? If. Maiden. Uu&
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1925, edition 1
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