Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Oct. 11, 1912, edition 1 / Page 7
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A femal optimist la a woman wh( marries a poet" . - A great majority of summer flls art out to Mlri la suppressed ionn. Lee aitnda and headaches are but two tvrap tome. OXID1NB eradicates tha Malaria arm and tones up tha antira system Adv. Thoss lova truth beat who to them aelves ara true, and what they dare to dream of, dare to do. James Rus sell Lowell ,- For IUMMBR RBADACHIM nicka' CAPUDINK la tha brat remedy no matter what causes them whether from tha heat, sitting In draughte, fever iah condition, ate. 10o., Bo and Mo par bottle at madlolna atorea. Adv. Rural Fat "Sims oarer made a big hit Just ploughed hie way along." "What a harrowing life!" He ahowlae form, end the iHt altivtHl ma. fur fiuwa people and eeildrea.Meeats. Air. Complimentary. "What would you oall It in a man to ateal all my tdeaaT" "Petty larceny." - . - Aa a rammer ton la there la no medicine that quite eomparea with OXIDINE. It not . only builds up the system, but taken reg ularly, preventa Malaria. Begular or Tatte laaa formula at Druggiste. Adr. Wrong Quese. Nan l'?e aeen your new young man, and I ahould call him a diamond In the rough. , ran Well, he'i auaceptlble of aoma polish, I'll admit, but you haven't claaalfled him correctly; he's a Jasper. CUm IABEK IATID Rll Un. Mr. Chaa, W. Miller, of Washington, D. C wrltea of Elixir Batoki "I can heartily teetlfy to tha virtue of your praparatloa known aa Babek, aa I consider that It waa tha mean of my recovery from a bad caaa of Intermit tent fever and tha eavlng of my Ufa." Wbat it did for him It can do for you. If you auffer from any form of malaria. Elixir Babwk, SO centa. all druggists, or Ktocaawakl A Co.. Washington. B.C. Adv. Youthful Woman Pastor. Her. Miss Ina L Morgan of the Methodist church of Georgetown and Arrowslo, Me., Is the youngest woman pastor In New England. 'She Is In her early twentlea and has been engaged In church work for nearly four years, having reoeived a license In 1908 from Bishop John W. Hamilton of Worces ter. New 8tage In Inebriety, Mr. Borden haa been telling an an ecdote concerning two "brither Scota" who used to foregather In a "dry" district, each bringing with him a portable spring of comfort In the shape of a bottle of whisky. . One of them1 was asked one day by a "third party" whether the other, Jock Anderson, did not get a little drunk sometimes. ' "Drunk," was the reply. "Man, the last time I was wi' him Jock was that drunk I couldna see him." Lon don MalL Getting Along Fine at 8chool. Now that school has been "goln". several weeks parents are beginning to Inquire of their young hopefuls as . to their progress. The other day a mother out on Harrison boulevard, while eating luncheon with her 6-year-old, asked: ' "And how are you getting along ,ln school, Dorothy?" "Oh," replied Dorothy between mouthfuls of bread and milk, "just fine! I and Frances Smith are the smartest and best dressed girls in the school." Kansas City Star. HAD ALREADY LEARNED. .. "I hear your son's at college leant In' to be a author. ' Do you expect .. hell soon learn to write for money T" 1 "Humph! He don't do nothln' else . now." ..." . 1 ITS THE FOOD. The True Way to Correct Nervous Troubles. Nervous troubles are more often caused by Improper food and Indiges tion than most people Imagine. Even doctors sometimes overlook this fact , A man says: . "Until two years ago waffles and , butter with meat and gravy were the main features of my breakfast. Finally dyspepsia came on and I found myself in a bad condition, worse In the morn ing than any other time. I would have a full, alck feeling In my stomach, with , pains In my heart, sides and head. .: "At times I would have no appetite, for days, then I would feel ravenous, never satisfied when I did eat and so nervous I felt like shrieking at the . top of my voice. I lost flesh badly and hardly knew which way to turn until one day I bought a box of Grape-Nuts food to see if I could eat that I tried It without telling the doctor, and liked It fine; made me feel as If I had some thing to eat that was satisfying and til) I didnt have that heaviness' that I had felt after eating any other food. "I hadn't drank any coffee then la five weeks. ,! kept on with the Grape Nuta and la a month and a half I had gained 15 pounds, could eat almost anything I wanted, didn't feel badly e' er eating and my nervousness was all gone. It'a a pleasure to be well agnin.". Name given by Fostum Co, Battle Creek, Mich. Read the book, "The Road to Wellvtlle," la para. "There's a msoa." : - ' r-e tfce aawvw IrtterT A new . fra tle to tlaee. Tker ,. IrM, ea4 fall ol " Take W JmHvhovW f a Jr a t-tSj OIUlX YONIO. Tua teow what roe are taking, Tbe format to elalnlr irinuo on every boLUe. ll la elBDlv UQlnlBe ft nd Imn la a. luulaM fu UK apaotacular opportunities for courage mar be few or none at all. Our commonplace opportuni ty for courage etarta when we awake and laat until we to to Bleep. "Tha oourasa of the commonplace la greater than tha Murage of tha oriels." OTHER USES OF FRUITS AND VEG ETABLES. Lemons are a good spring tonic, are eooltng and thinning to the blood and a most refreshing acid for hot weath er. The Juice of grapes is laxative and a fine blood tonic . Apples are also a skin beautiner, baked ara a laxative and most whole some for Invalid diet. Cranberries are said to cure ma laria and eryslpelaa. Tomatoes are a qulckener of the tor pid liver, but should be avoided by gouty people. Pineapple contains a digestive agent which Is excellent la cases of dyspep sia. Dates and figs are exceedingly nour ishing and are a cure for constipation. Bananas are both wholesome and nutritious If ripe and well scraped. Water cress Is an excellent blood purifier and spring tenia. Lettuce haa a soothing effect upon the nerves, so la good for sufferers from Insomnia. , Beets and potatoes put on fat 1 Carrots are good for the complex Ion and cure constipation. ' Spinach la the broom of the blood, a splendid spring medicine, and la an excellent medicine for the kid neys. Parsley alda digestion and wards off dyspepsia when eaten with the meal. Also sweetens the breath after eating onions. Onions are a cure for nervous pros tration, are soothing In cases of con sumption, excellent for colds, coughs, scurvy, a preventive of insomnia and good In cases of lagrlppe and pneu monia. "Kill the onion and you leave a gap In the universe. It is a special creation to tempt the palate of the weary world!" HEN the fight begins within himself A man's worth something. An engine of one catpower, running all the time, la more effective than one of forty horsepower, standing still. Oeorga William Curtis. SOMETHING TO TRY. The majority of cooks look with askance upon dishes prepared from calves' brains. Calves' brains are really a great delicacy, have the flavor of oysters and should be cooked while fresh, as they spoil quickly. Remove the fiber and lay the brains In salted water to simmer for twenty minutes; take out and cover with cold water, which will whiten ' them and make them firm, if a teaBpoonful of vinegar is added. Lay on a cloth and pat gently to dry, then cut into half-inch slices. Put two tableBpoonfuls of but ter and half a tablespoonful of lard Into a hot pan, dust the brains with salt and pepper and brown quickly on both1 sides, being careful not to break while turning. Serve with slices of lemon. , 8callop of Roast Pork and Cabbage. Place a layer of thinly-sliced roast pork, -two cups of pork, a cup and a half of cooked cabbage and a cup and a half of white sauce, arranged' in lay ers. Heat In the oven until the sauce bubbles. Frozen Deaaert To the pulp of three bananas put through a sieve, add the Juice of three oranges, three lemons and three cups of water cooked together with ; three cups of sugar; cool and freeze. When half froien, add a cup of whipped cream. ' Oatmeal , Bread Add a cup . of cooked oatmeal to a cup. of bread sponge, a half cup of sugar and two tableBpoonfuls of shortening, a tea spoon of salt and a half cup of seed less raisins. ' Mix aa stiff aa possible with' a spoon.'' . Baked Corn. A cup of corn cooked and cut from the cob, add a beaten egg, a cup of milk, a chopped green pepper; sprinkle with buttered crumbs and brown. Serve very hot Corn In Tomato Cupa-Salt the in side of tomatoes that have been hol lowed out, fill with stewed corn sea soned well with butter and grated cheese, cover with buttered crumbs and bake until the tomatoes are ten der, but not broken. Fresh Pork With Apples Mince rem- errae"'kaaiaaBa , Would Limit the Supply. Aunt Nell is visiting a family of four little nieces out on South Harri son street It Is auntie's first visit la several years, and when she began to distribute presents among the little onea It turned out that she couldnt tell them apart A ring Intended for Mehttabel found its way to the finger of Jane, next youngest That night when Mehitabel aald her prayers the mistake was, still fresh la her mind. . ..;. ., "Dear Lord," she said, "please don't Logical. "What do you think of abolishing whipping In prisons?" - - "Well, It seems a punishment to fit the crime for the hoboes." "How sor - V "On the ground of "whips to the beat"' Cold Meat Relish. Take any cold meat cut Into small bits and put a layer In a baking dish, then add a layer of sliced onions, one of tomatoes, more meat onions and All Y Y nants of cold roast pork to make two cupfuls, season and moisten with a few spoonfuls of gravy. Wash half a dosen greening apples and core care fully, leaving a cup to hold the meat Place a small piece of butter on each and bake. Serve for a luncheon dish. BELIEVE there la aoma thine for each one to do. Borne time, aoma place and eomehow; We believe we can do It, and we believe, too. We ara ready to do It-right now! WAYS OF U8INQ DISHES. LEFT-OVER Rice may be baked In an escalloped dish with cheese or tomatoes, making a fine luncheon dish. Rloe With Apples-Pare, quarter and cor,e three or four medium slsed apples and -cook them carefully in a sirup made of sugar one cup, a cup of water and a slice of lemon, being care ful to keep the apples whole. While they are cooking, reheat In a double boiler a cupful or two of cooked rice, adding a tablespoonful of sugar and one of aweet cream to each cup of rice, stirring lightly with a fork. Cov er and let heat thoroughly. Pile the rice In the center of a glass dish and place the apples around It Pour over any remaining sirup and garnish with a few candled cherries. Serve with or without whipped cream. Rice With Bananas-Peel and sorape three ripe bananas and mash them with a fork until smooth and oreamy, adding a few drops of lemon Juice. Stir this lightly into a cup of cold cooked rice and serve with sweet ened cream. This is a wholesome, nu tritious dish and especially attractive to children. German Rice Pudding Mix aweet ened whipped cream with cold rice and put In layers with apple aauce In a baking dish, having the rice on top. serve cold. Rice Griddle Cakes. Steam a cup of cooked rice in part of a cup . of milk, using a fourth of a cup. Add a half cup of milk, a tablespoonful each of butter and sugar, a dash of salt half cup of flour, a teaapoonful of ba king powder and an egg well beaten. Beat well and bake on a hot griddle. A cup of cold rice added to any muf fin or gem mixture and baked adds to the food value and makes It seem like a new dish. EROISM -It la so fine a thing that he Who haa It knowa It not. Until, In aoma quick moment Of hla life, upon the occasion The deed so brave la done. Then quietly upon hla way he goes. And why men praise he hardly knowa. 80METHING ABOUT OMELETS. . A light, fluffy, tender omelet is a dainty dish which is fit for any meal, and one which, with a little practice, Is easily prepared. ThaM im onv nnmhep nt nmplAta. varying with the sauce used or season - lags added to them. , Fish Is especially well liked added to an omelet, a half cupful to aa ordl-! nary sized one. The fish is best added to tW omelet after It Is cooking; spread one-half with th mlrtiira anil fold over the other half, as otherwise it Is more likely to be heavy. One thing to remember Is that too large an omelet is never satisfactory. It Is better to make two or three small ones and have them good than to spoil all In preparing too large a one. French people make omelets with no liquid added; some American cooks use water and others - milk. , Some cooks say that milk .makes a tough omelet and water a stringy one. A foamy omelet is made by folding in the whites of the eggs beaten stiff. Whichever method Is used, experi ence, a deft hand and heat Just right are necessary for a successful omelet , One may prepare a very wholesome and appetizing omelet using a half cup of tried fresh . mushrooms . or cooked asparagus tips, spreading the mixture on half the omelet and folding ! over the other half. I Sweet omelets are delicious, and all too Infrequently served. A glass of apple Jelly spread on a plain omelet makes a really fancy dish. Paraley and chives chopped fine and added to eggs before cooking la an other method of seasoning. send Auntie Nell any more nieces. She's so careless she can't keep track of what she's got now." Kansas City Journal. Comparing Misfortunes. "Here I find my beat chicken stolen!" cried the farmer. "Ah!" said the local Burns, "a foul wrong!" , "And I," cried the druggist "have missed all my little bottles!" "So T" exclaimed, the embryo detec tive. "Here I suspect a vial plot" tomatoes. Fill dish la order given. season with salt and pepper, moisten with gravy or stock. Make a crust for top and bake one hour. First half hqur cover with a plate, then uncover to make a rich brown. Wall Informed. "Do you know what the Important Issues are In this campaign T" "I don't know anything about the Important Issues, but I know exactly what tha rival candidates think of each other." YV" nil : W " Mm m .trt'ri ? .t .,. t-w. i t t iti a-VU s I N order to get an Idea of the scenery of Ceylon the traveler must go to Kandy or, still higher up the mountains, to Nurwara Eliya. At Colombo he can take his place In a comfortable Brat-claae carriage with a dining car attached and from his window he will see the land where every prospect pleases and only man, as the hymn writer says, is vile. But as you watch the crowd of natives on the platform of Colombo station, the men and women In their bright attire, picturesque and happy, are. Indeed, as Dleaslng to the eye j u the fairy-like land that they an- habit No railway station In America ever presents a scene more brilliant In coloring or more animated. The natives, according to their custom, have been waiting for hours for the train; at the moment of departure they crowd into the third-class car riages hurrying as if they suspected an intention to leave them behind, feverishly excited, calling to one an other at the top of their voices. .The trn'n plunges at once Into beau tiful act-iiL-ry into a world of amaxlng greenery A rice field among other verdure i - n emerald among all green stones. And for thirty ,or forty miles It la through rice fields surrounded by eocoanut palms that the train passes. As Colombo Is left behind, however, the traveler first looks out on gardens of cinnamon and fields of grass. Then the broad Kelanl river comes In sight. From the forest of palms, grassy slopes come down to the edge of the water. Floating down the stream are native barges two canoes Joined to gether by a sort of raft and covered over. Kingfishers flash over the river and hover among the scented white blossoms of the mangoes. On the green pools float ' pink and white lilies; a' red flamingo rises from among them and spreads its broad wings against the blue aky. Buffaloes stand, up to their necks, In the mud of the swamps. Every minute the scenery becomes more beautiful There are high ridges covered with palm trees and between the ridges valleys of rice fields.. Tou see sowing and reaping going on at the same time. Up to their ankles In 1 JJf n'es. bare-legged. walk M"'1 tne PRt,ent 7 ! Primitive plowa. Here a group ? mndjn "ttle banks , of the terraced fields ; there women , w,tn cWe cu",ng the r,pene1 cr"P; Iu, are bathing, holding to the branches of the mangrove trees. 8cenea Almost Unreal. The reflection of the palm trees In the water, the shadow of the clouds chasing the sunlight across the sub merged fields and the bright costumes of. the natives combine to form a pic ture so lovely that it ceems almost unreal to western eyes. The train passes a tea garden shaded with rub ber trees; Women with bright shawls 'fcOver their heads and huge baskets on their backs, witn shoulders and arms bare, are working among the gleaming shrubs that come up to their waists. The train crosses the main street of a native village; on both sides Is a Jungle of eocoanut palms. In little clearings among the trees are the huts of the Clnghalese small white houses, with brown tiled roofs and broad verandas. It has rained dur- lng the' night; now the sun Is shining on glowing red soil and glistening leaves and grass; birds are singing; the golden oriole and the brilliant parroquet dart , through the palms, beautiful butterflies hang over the trees, aflame with crimson blossom. The train enters a thick forest all the more tropical In appearance be cause of the vast creepers that coll round the tree trunks and wave in The Great White Sale! Quite a nation was moving about In these snowy regions. ; And ' the crowd seemed to be black, like skat era on a Polish lake In December. On the ground floor there was a heavy swell, ruffled by a reflux, In which nothing but the delicate enraptured faces of women could be distinguished. In the caps of the Iron framework, up the staircases, on the hanging bridges, there was an endless ascent of amall figures, which looked aa If lost amidst the snowy peaks of moun tains. A suffocating hothouse heat surprised one at sight of these frozen heights. The buss of all the volcea made a great noise, like that of a river carrying Ice along. Up above, the profusion of gliding, the glasa work and the golden roses aeemed Ilka a burst of sunshine, glittering over the Alps of this grand exhibition of white .goods. From Zola's "The Ladles Paradise." -v, Where Honesty la Worthteea. Many a man , would have turned rogue If ha knew how. William Has-Utt : al C ' . w y. -ri t ' n xnzf --V " xs- mmm the breese In snakelike festoons. On the banks of a stream In the forest a crocodile basks In the sun; a lizard four feet long creeps Into the under growth. . The railway reaches rocky foothills; the undergrowth Is very dense. Trees cover the hillsides which rise to green pyramids against the aky. Here and there are cultivated clearings banana and rubber and tea plantations high above the level of the train. There are rice fields terraced on the elopes like the vineyards of Italy. The train stops at a station. Near by ara bullock carta loaded with bunches of bananaa; nativea on the platforms offer bananaa for sale and oranges which are ripe though bright green. 8oon mountain peaks appear. Ton aee them through a waving mass of palms, cocoanuta, arecanuta and tali pots In flower. As we ascend the hills we look down on a valley filled with rice fields. Hundreds of terraces filled with water gleam like Irregular silver steps leading up the mountainsides. A vast green world spreads before us, shut in by lofty ranges. Where the red soil appears on the slopes are tea gardens, cocoa and coffee plantations. Gray rocks Jut out amidst the waving Jungle grass. The scene grows wilder. A crenellated summit standing out against a vast white cloud looks like a ruined castle. Some half-naked men grouped In front of a hut thatched with palm leaves, their long hair hanging over their shoulders, have a wild and almost terrifying appearance. Alagala peak, 3,300 feet high, comes Into view; It was from this precipi tous summit that the last king of Kandy hurled the prisoners, taken In battle. ' ' Through the broad leaves of the wild banana you see the mountain carriage road passing through a sort of cave or hole cut In a spur of the mountain side. A native tradition was that the Kandyan country would be conquered by invaders who came through a rock, Tunnel Through Rock, and when the road was built for mili tary purposes this rock was purposely tunneled that the nativea might be awed by the fulfillment of the proph ecy. Along the banks of rock-strewn mountain rivers, along hillsides cov ered with Jungle, through cacao and rubber plantations the train comes to Kandy, the popular hill resort of the merchants In Colombo and of the low country planters. Here we are 1,600 feet above the sea; Nuwara Eliya is nearly 5,000 feet higher still up the mountains. As the train ascends we find our selves passing through a region de voted to tea gardens. It is the very center of the industry. We have left behind us the tropical scenery. From the carriage window we no longer see palms or bamboos or the brilliant green of the rice fields. The views grow more and more enchanting. There is a glimpse of the distant In dian ocean, a vision of Adam's peak, the famous mountain of pilgrimage. A waterfall dashes down the moun tainside up which we crawl in amaz ing curves. Through a forest the train comes to Nuwara Eliya, the chief pleasure resort of Ceylon. It Is in the midst of a vast plateau of Jungle grass. These highland plains, which are often covered with rhodo dondron trees and w'th wild flowers, are called In Ceylon patanas. They form a striking feature of the high land scenery and the traveler arriv ing at Nuwara Eliya and looking across the rolling grass country to the encircling hills, covered with drift ing mist, might well suppose himself to be standing on a Scottish' moor. A Chaperons for ths Young. Queen Mary Is said to have deplored the easy 'fashion In which mothers have allowed their girls to run about at their own sweet will during the last tew- seasons. Anyhow the chaperon haa been reinstated at girl and boy dances. Of course, girl and boy dances, so called, are for those al ready out In the world; but the new "flapper dances" are quite a different thing and are given for girls of four teen to sixteen and their friends. These entertainments are run on the lines that have made them so popu lar In Paris. ' Governesses and even nurses hover about If mothers, aunts and their friends are not on the spot. The dances are usually afternoon af fairs, and besides the "two step" and "three step" the gavotte and minuet ara popular. The Gentlewoman. V- X; Your Handa Experienced f - A- wide girdle at the waist la tha latest fad, so that the top of the aklrt will coincide with the bottom, and only an experienced hand will be able to tell which la the bait line and which la tha hem. THE CHILDREN'S HEALTH In observing the physical character istics of her children, the careful moth er soon learns that health Is depend ent on the regularity of the bowels. When the bowels become clogged with the stomach's refuse, loss of appetite, restlessness, Irritability, and similar evidences of disorder are soon appar ent Keep the bowels regular and a healthy, happy child la assured. At the first sign of constipation the mother should administer a mild laxa tive to carry off the congested waste from the stomach that ia fermenting and forcing poisonous gases Into the system. A simple compound of laxa tive herbs with pepsin is highly recom mended aa being very mild, yet posi tive, In Its action, a teaapoonful at bedtime usually serving to bring an easy, thorough, natural movement next morning. This compound Is known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and Is sold by druggists everywhere for 50c a bottle. A larger bottle, put up especially for the family medicine chest, costs one dollar. The use of salts and violent purga tives and cathartics should be avoid ed. 1 They are too harsh and drastic, tending to upset the entire system. Write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 203 West St.. Montlcello, 111., for a trial bottle of his Syrup Pepsin, If you have never used it He will be glad to send It without any expense to you. Adv. Vegetable Fiber for 8hoes. A Haverhill (Mass.) shoeman has ob tained patents giving him the right to make vamps and tops of vegetable fiber which he has Invented and per fected to be used In the manufacture of shoes. A few cases of shoes have been made of this material! which ap pears to be a good substitute for leath er. The fiber is said to be particularly adaptable for warm weather wear be cause, being of a woven material, air can penetrate the vamp and top. The Inventor also claims that a shoe made cl this material Is waterproof. Bunkoed. Griggs How about that piece of land you bought down on the cape? Anything come up on It? Briggs Tes, the tides. To prevent Malaria ia far better than to cure it. In malarial countries take a dose of OXIDINE refrularly one each week and save yourself from Chills and Fever and other malarial troubles. Adv. Inspiration that comes in bottles Is often adulterated with regrets. Ifr. Wlnslow's Soothing Bymp for Children teething, aoftene the guma, reduces Inflamma tion, allays paint cures wind colic, Sic a bottle. Adi. At the age of forty a man begins to live and unlearn. From Forty-Five to Fifty Axe Much Benefited by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. The "change of life la a most critical period in a woman's ex istence, and the anxiety felt by women as it draws near is not without reason. When her system is in a de ranged condition, she may be predisposed to apoplexy, or con gestion of some organ. At this time, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to form and begin their destructive work. Such warning symptoms aa sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backaches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, vari able appetite, weakness and inquietude, and dizziness, are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period in life when woman's great change may be expected. These symptoms are calls from nature for help. The nerves are crying out for assistance and the cry should be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is prepared to meet the needs of women's system at this trying period of her life. It invigorates and strengthens the female organism and builds up the weakened nervous system. It has carried many women safely through this crisis. W.LDOUGLAS SHOES 3.00 3.50 4.00 4.50 AKD 5.00 FOR MEN AND WOMEN Urny eravsfi W. L. Oouglmm 92.00, 09.BO $3.00 Mohmol i Sttamm, Itmamuum aw mmlr wHI pmmlthrmly mmmumm fay gaaaXa ear mrammry awe, mmmm mm raw aanaai'ai awaau WJ-Dooglaa make and sells more $3.0043.50 & $440 shoe J ' than any other manufacturer in tha THI STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER SO YEARS. Tb workmanship which has made W. L. Douglas shews famous the world over is maintained in every pair. ; 1 Ask your dealer to show yon W. L Douglas latest fashions for fall and winter wear, notice) thai thort vampt which make tha foot look smalVar, points ia shoe particularly desiiad by young man. Also tha eontmrvatlom Mtylti which hava made) W. L. Douglas (hoes a household word everywhere. If yoa could visit W. L, Douglas largo factories at Brockton, Maee, and ss for yourself how earafolly W. L. Douglas shoos are) made, yon would than un derstand why thaw aro warranted to fit bettor, look batter, hold their shape and war longer than any other snake for the prioa. ratCoer tfltt. CAUTION.-Te aeweaet reu aeeJaet IseWior IW.LrrWawnkUaui.Mtf.Mi teas. Look far the etaaae. b-ware at rabtlttuto. W. L. louiiu .. mrm mota ,a 7 owe) eteewaaadftlieeaaaleie aiary able. Nonftatter where rwe they are erttma eewrMc. If vwar dealer eaaawe. seMer rn, write aweet te factory roe eaten eetw, mow e , bgasaa). jSeweeosa aieii ehsie, dfisiy it mass naaeia1. VI i ieusiai.ir.iia.ea BACKACHE IS DISCOURAGING Until You Gat After The Cause ' Nothing more dis couraging than a con stent backache. Lame when yon awake. Pains pierce you when you bend or lift It's hard to work, or to rest You sleep poorly and next day is the same old story. That backache in dicates bad kidneys sod calls for some good kidney remedy. None so well rec- nwnnmnAA mm Ta. n 'a - " ajeer Pielun Kidney Pills. nut a awf Ham's A MaUaasr Cae- Mrs. Albert Taylor, Elm St., Falrfleld, Me., says: "For years I had kidney trou ble. There was asonlslns pain In my back, a sort of burning pain. Nothing helped me until I took boan's Kldnry pills. They helped my kidneys and the burning pain left. Others In my family have been benefited by this remedy." Get Doea's at Aar Drug Store, BOe a Box DOAN'SVK!,' FOSTER MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver la right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently but firmly c pel a lazy liver to Oo Its duty. Cures Con stipation, in digestion. Sick Heautacba. end Diatraea After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Richest la Healing Qualltie a-Ofl BACK AO Kg. RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS AND SLAODea) FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS KODAKS and High Grade Finishing. Mail orders siren Spe cial Attention. . Prices reasonable. Service prompt. Bend for Price List, unutl abt areas, chabuhtos, a, C nnflDCV TRAT0. G1t onle ra Vnurl i,f, usnsiiy remoTe swel ling and snort breath. In a few days and entire relief In UVefr days, trial treatment FKEK. aa.aaaaaaaosa, aeA.iitoHiin. THOMPSON'S we'1.T3 Uf A T C D Sold everrohere So. WttM L. THOMPSON SUMa CO- Troy. M. T iinikii i W. N. U, CHARLOTTE, NO. 41-1912. ill ' ft Ta-lT " ' n D THw-Estella Gillispie H ONE CASK OUT OP MANY TO PROVE OUR CLAIMS. St. Anne, I1L "I was passing through the change of life and I was a perfect wreck from female troubles. I had a displacement and bearing down pains, weak fainting spells, dizziness, then numb and cold feelings. Some times my feet and limbs were swollen. I was irregular and had so much backache and headache, was nervous, irritable and was despondent. Sometimes my ap petite was good but more often it was not My kidneys troubled me at times and I could walk only a short distance. " 1 saw your advertisement In a iaper and took Lydia E. Rnk iam's Vegetable Compound, and I was helped from the first At the end of two months the swel ling had gone down, I was re lieved of pain, and could walk with ease. I continued with the medicine and now I do almost all my housework. I know your medicine has saved me from the grave and I am willing for you to publish anything I write to you, for the good of othe."Mr8. Estklla Gillispie. R.F.D. No. 4, Box 34, St Anne, Illinois. world. XI IIIVLK r w ss m.i i Mis $ V VLml
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 11, 1912, edition 1
7
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