Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Oct. 31, 1935, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
An Alan GwHiroapeetor, U pre ring to leave ff bla mining claim' the Far NorV plana lands mt a airways ejfergenoy station. In arc Burto Hamlll, millionaire "ins magni hl daughter, . Lll viJtn Hnvtir. .nllot and mlng engior. Believing blra to only an yfenorant proepeotor tne mane an air trip to , ii clrthi. ahough they refer to r.tatlirfm-beaj'lng ore as nearly L.llith Kamtli. product -:t the If age, plainly , shows ner ;untempf for, Garth. -Tbrougn uartna n u Mane the plane oon reaches the claim ete. !.?V .i'r. pHAPTEH II Continued .z, r'.A-th Vanltail iinnn tha wins and s afced 4n along It to tne mseisge. The girtl leaned from; the big rear window of the cabin.. ''Give meyour ,Mnd,": Garth salaVTn awtag you . on ito"iringP:&-fyZ&&i$-.:7. :: knelt above her on the' cabin and reached down. : Her Hps d In a contemptuous smllel ,',;.C if that's the beat yon can do, 11 staj right here. Tvs no wish o go bathing." , ' : " :'?i? "In that case, get out of the way. Tour father wishes ', to see my prospect Til not waste time' buyd-li-g a needless gangway." ' ; she was the' heiress to "millions and bad been reared In prodigal Never had she been treat ed so cavalierly as by this buckskln clad prospector.? She turned to her fiance. r ' : "Vivian you heard the, Insolent fciiow r ,; b ... Huxby grasped the wing tip to pull himself up. The girl's father spoke over her shoulders "Stay where you are, Vivian. We're here to look at Garth's mine. Be has nr reed to help 1.111 th and me ashore. If she prefers to remain aboard, i" niay do so." ,' , a t , ghi looked both ' surprised , i angered. ; She drew back Into t . i bin. Her father thrust ut bis I l from the window to look up at C:n-fh.. K'0-st:.i-;':'rir "Won't It la tnore'than you can manage! -"I weigh over two hun dred." ;:'f:vv-' i-ifJf 1 or reply, Garth reached down. Tie - portly millionaire,, hdngyln Garth's grasp almost like a dead v '. ht Set Garth swnng him bod Hy np and around on the wing.,-: He led the limning gentleman out to the far . end,- near the tip,: and lowered him down upon the top of the ledger Before, he could follow, r s KamlU called; : out to him; e back' fox -me.4t should be - enough, ' Xou ' did sot drop i a.m r.arttt looked no the gulch. Smiled, end went to swing the girl ut Of the window, v Up on the wing She clutched his shoulder as If to steady herself. , Ber scarlet-smeared lips curved In a patronizing smile. . "xon're wonoerruuy ruriwgi " e kna' than "muscle," , h I. It 'was simply marvelous Ik... yo'a lifted Dad without losing your balance. 'f. fv'.y 7& Out near 'the wing tip Garth drew 1 arm free from ber clasp; caught L -.:t pj ine iqsrws,ano iwrenjii new, Into Huxby's upthrust bands. .A- :'ook4 spsnd- smiled. .tiSo t' f you, old dear. Now, -if r ' i..h a cup. Tm dying to try . of this delightful-looking v liter." , ': . o. ', . . . eying Would be more apt to ' y.mr drink," Garth replied. ? down besldo her father. ' .k is rock-flour ground off icier. It's apt to be a dan . luk' There's clear water : regoing.":;:;,!.';' ht up his rifle; and set the easy npslope from the .!.., The others' followed n, picking their . way . be ) goraggy branches of the s. Before long the trees (: wn to timberllqe scrub. , i odd-colored stone 1" , Toe 1 to stare resentfully at 'e grandeur of the mouu--.ks the valle "Did yon r oh a horrible place? It's tad as those' ash-heap i la the Mohave desert , Dad, Pon't keep us -. This raw hole makes r spoke lrritabjyj Ton i when I advised yon 'Tionton. Why dlctot i tlie cabin, Instead' of i 88horet"v;,y,f- i': . T,", she complained. :h to've dragged my a God-forsaken dirt n berries ', are sour. . There ought to be m on somewhere, i Vivian getme up y at Garth. . .ii j.r'.,..ti the ) ' f "! the purpose tha had brought them ashore.''.:,!: 'r;j:'i'' Sr?t t -l'll " swing yon ;, aboard easy enough,' Lllith," he said. 'Mr ; ; Garth spoke ' to him t without a, trace of amusement i. . ': -! .4 ,f ;s "If you ask -me 1 think this lit tle walk' .te the mine-would ' be good exercise for Miss Ramlll. VVben I lefHiere, last month,' there was a she-grizzly with ' two. cubs back along tbe lake- shore. They - may have gone off: maybe- not ' That pistol of yours wouldn't be of much use If you happened to blunder be tween the old lady and her young Ones." ''.0''. ; "Xon saw tba beast, yet did not kill! her scoffed iBuxby. )Pretty thln-r 'f.-v -';'-V'' :',-" . "Not at all; she was iulte fat 'It happened, though, I had no need, of' mea,t or bear skins. Also, she was as willing as I was to live and let live, just so I kept away from her cobs." iA'ft i Mr; KamlU started to, overtake him. ."Lead ahead. Garth, I came here to see your prospect, not to talk about shooting." (.,;,; ...i v 'v-.'i i Garth went on,' up aslant the tun dra., When he came to where the smooth slope dropped Into a shal low trough, v a i backward ; glance showed the girl and Busby loiter ing along behind her father. The portly millionaire came panting up beside Gartb. . :l"Weli?" he asked. " "There's my claim," Garth an swered. "My lower stake Is down at ' that cross dyke of gneiss, a thousand -feet or so from the lake shore. The upper one stands about three - hundred . feet below those slide ledges. Ton could stake a claim above mine, but I doubt If yon'd find pay dirt There Is none at all between the lower stake and the lake. The dyke stopped the downdrlft of the alloy. . Isampled several , acres. ' Beginning at the grass roots and 1 going down . to frost, the dirt ran from five to ten dollars a pan. . This trough Is a placer pocket-r-a cache filled by the age-long downdrlft from those disin tegrated veins np the, mountain. My claim covers all or nearly all the deposit and It Is worth several hun dred thousand dollars, If not a mil lion." iK v. .r; -i.- yif'y .1 ; The cool certainty of .' Garth's statement compelled belief. - Mr. Bamlll's ruddy face went blank. 1: Bis daughter looked - at , Gartb with a sudden change from boredom and disdain to- an Interest that verged on respect-Here was sensa Wpn somethlnr new.. The despised woodsy vagabond of the wilds was not a pauper, after all I , It was ilka a play, the wandering' beggar boy disclosing himself to be the true prince. He bad said, "a mil lion 1" - ' Vvi ' Like the older man, Huxby bad put on Us poker face. He was, not so successful,' however, in. keeping the glint out of bis eyes. " Be tad yet to make bis fortune. ' - "So it's a million?" . be " scoffed. "No. wonder yon . . prospectors go crazy, rind a little placer you guess has some gold In It and you think you've located a mint .Flva to ten dollars a panl AVby,7ack, your metal wouldn't give you half a dol lar a ipaq. even If your small per centage of gold was alloyed with silver. Instead- of 'lead.1.-;' a.;.. Garth smiled. "My mistake both' ering you to test that sample. Just chew on this, my friend: A good many sousdbughs might not be able to; Identify that gray-white metaL Bnt only a chechaheo would be un able to recognise that It Is not ga lena vt silver. ..!-ir.-';si Y-'lr -This silenced the engineer-for the moment Mr. Bamlll favored Gartb with bis blandest ,mttt.H-jv&J, "TeehDrcIami lltfe Hnxby are too apt to imagine that the rest of ns know nothing. . Now, admitting for the sake of the argument that your rect suppose .we sample your pros pect."- 1 1 - . For reply, Garth led- down Into the trough to where a moss-bedded spring rlU trickled down from pool to pool. He stopped beside a stlal- low dugout roofed with spruce branches, moss and dirt - Cndeir lt lay a small shovel and pickax,1 a worn gold pan,' and a little alum inum, cooking pot; ' ': ."v, ; Garth turned to Huxby.!fThereH the pan. Get your samples and go to -Itfc': "U-l.t -:--;' "How do t know your holes aren't saltedr ' -tVv'fi'' -' "Ion don't .know anything. Why not scratch down the gravel" your self? Or perhaps I salted all tha i trough, before ! laid on this blanket of grass and moss.". ;" .ji Mr., Bamlll interposed r : "Mining engineers, have - to guard against fraud as well as error, Garth. -1 was salted once myself, in ,my callow Cays. Ju-t to !-' your prcf- . ai conscience suppose 'you ( clear gravel for us midway between here and for the staked bole down there." ' "That's my discovery stake," Garth replied, j ''Wasn't looking for gold IrV'tbls trough.1 ijust happened to notice the gray metal where the spring gush of the -rill bad torn the moss from., the gravel. About ' my dlgglngrJE must beg td be exepsed. What If 4 should happen to drop a handful of that galena Into the bole; when, your expert' was ' not l00klngt?-J'!S:';a:K;'''';;'; 'Ignoring the Irony,,' Huxby pulled the shovel, from the dugout shelter and gouged into a bed of moss. Mr, Ramlll stooped his portly body to pick up tba gold pan.i;t.jj:ViJiik! ,! Huxby shoveled clear , the moss and black bumus from' a space two feet.' or more square. He tossed aside a few stones the size of his fist; and took the gold pan, from Mr.- Bamlll to load it with gravel. They, went . a tew steps . downsldpe to the edge of a lower pool. ,;;,,;;. p2:l None too deftly,' Huxby ' dipped water Into the pan and1 begafi to ro tate the contents. ! After more than twice the time an old prospector would have , needed .for the, opera tion, the mining -engineer ..worked the pan clear of all except a spoon ful of dull nodules.';. :-(.',,v-J:;-?i ,, Miss Bamlll I bad stretched ' but to ; bask In the summer warmth. With the upslant' of the sun to wards the j noon '.of :' the nineteen hour day, the breeze had died down. The calm brought a swarm of mosquitoes ppslope from the lake shore.,,' The girt put on her bead net covered the nnbooted part of her legs - with . caribou moss, and resumed her sun Jbatb. r Out of the tail of his eye Garth watched Huxby , and,' Mr. Bamlll. When he saw the two get their net draped beads" together : over the gold pan, he rose and went towards them. The tread of bis moccasins was noiseless. . Before the two no ticed, his approach,, be stood look ing down over their shoulders. "Not half bad for a starter,'! be said, v" At least five dollars In your first pan." Hardlv that .value."' replied Mr. Ramlll; ' "Admitting there Is some platinum In this alloy, I am afraid Garth Vaulted Upon the Wing and Walked in Along It to the Fuselage, you're a far . too sanguine young man. Call It five per cent platinum and five of gold. That leaves ninety per cent of silver and lead, with of. course traces of Iridium and os mium." 1 , '.. : "Yes, move the decimal point of your million' three' places to the left Jack," said Huxby. "It brings your wonderful fortune down to a few thousands. To sluice this placer, freight out this alloy, and; pay for separating the metals will leave slim profits. - There may be none at all.", i;;,r:'..:.vs:l"i'vi'::'- ."Too bad you've bad all ,your trouble for nothing," Garth replied. "I counted on your finding it a real strike the first big. platinum de posit located In North America." Mr.' BamlU rose .to. lay, a consol ing band'on-bls houlder... , .."Never mind, my.boy. ' lonU n- cau wnat Vjioia youtaoauc my i couraglng -worthy prospectors. stand by that now. - I will give yon two thousand dollars for this prospect and take .the cnance - ot getting- back my t money by large scale placerlng." "lou're too generous Garthro- tested. UI couldn't think of tak ing your money. In fact I1U have to own up I had a little testing acid with me when J happened upon this gray alloy. So, as I, do not believe in cneatinSA suppose we neao. nacs for the Mackenzie." ,M' ' . . The millionaire mine buyer ehuck-J led and clapped him on the back. "Boy, you're a whole lot less a fool than yon look." Huxby stared bard. Then pock eting- the, alloy, , he went for "the. shovel. - e "Good idea.'' Gartb said. "A jan from above Discovery, one" below, and the same from , three' or four hundred feet out each Side they'll tell you' whether or not It's merely a small pocket." Without replying,.: Huxby , set off pp the trough. Mr. Ramlll Umped Slowly after htm. . : Miss Bamlll appeared to have, fallen asleep. She jay still, pro tected By ber net from the mosqui toes that tinged about ber bead. , ;, Relieved from the company of bis unpleasant travel mates. 'Garth f-:! ' d bnt Kite- the girt : Be thought of the tast length of time that bad been required to erode the side of the- mountain above hint Nature had spent ages In collect ing these hundreds; of thousands of dollars' . Worth of . precious alloy upon which be now lay basking., And be bad chanced to stumble' upon the treasure near the ' end of a trip of which exploration and adventure; bad , been . the prime . , motive and prospecting only a side Issue. Now. by law be 'was" sole owner of aU this 'wealth; iti; -: ?' : He -thought of the two men np slope -i whom-;, he -had s brought ' to share in his good fortune. ; They bad thanked him by seeking to lie and cheat farm out of It all. But that was the nature of far too many men. - There was no -reason to be surprised or'f angerd.s' They ' bad failed to outplay blm- wltb their Stacked cards. 'He Idoked at a clump of alpine blossoms close beside bis elbow, and smiled. .; .-. , TJpstope'he heard the swirl of graved In the - gold pan. - After a time the sound died out. Bla keen ear caught the dull tread of heavy feet on the.tnrf...ir4i;;;1iV??s..-, I Mr. ItamlH turned toward Garth. "We will go back to the. plnne for lunch while 'considering : the mat ter .; 'A-rrcwi . "Only for a short time," Huxby qualified.; "I Intend to retorn here for more sampling. No need of your troubling to Jom ns.l's,j' Gartb saw that his company- was not .wanted. "Thanks. I'm not hungry. Come to think TH go down to the lake and make Sure my old lady grizzly Isn't. Jurklng id the bush." ..,,' . . - ..v,' . "Your phantom ' bear," nocked Miss Bamlll. "Watch out she doesn't make a ghost of you," . ; -.Under, cover of his smile at the gibe, Garth, caught the glance that passed between her, father and Huxby. ' The girl bad .said it. "Watch out" was the word. , He swung down the trough with no sign of hurry. The length of his gliding stride made his move ments appear leisurely. Without looking back, he slanted. In among the sernbby spruces. A mass of the dense evergreens: put him out of sight of the three chechahcos up on - the open tundra. : He turned sharp to the right Midway down the brush-fringed lake shore, the tall spruces stood well spaced. He broke Into a run. f A vista' between the trees offered him a view npslope. He baited be hind a screen of young aspens to look. The three bad already reached the side of the trough.' They start ed to hurry on aslant the mountain side. Xlllth Ramlll and Huxby had the girl's heavy-bodied father be tween them. They were helping him along twice as fast as be could have made It without their aid. . No more was needed to confirm Garth's snspicions. He gilded across the glade and ran on through the woods like a startled caribou. The thick growth of spruces screened him from the View of anyone up on the open tundra. He vaulted upon the wing of the monoplane and ran along It to jump Into the . cockpit In a moment he bad hold of Huxby's tool-kit He went at the" engine like a skilled airplane mechanic. . When,, after a few moments - of quick work, he replaced the tool kit and ran back out the wing, there was a small metal object In side his buckskin shirt He Jumped off and slipped away to an alder thicket a short distance along the bake bank. . ' Less than three minutes later, he beard a heavy puffing and wheeling and the snap of dry branches. Then the three staggered Into sight Mr. Ramlll was .purple from exertion. His mouth - gaped wide with his gasps for breath. Neither his daugh ter nor Huxby was winded. But both, were flushed from the exer tion of Supporting the portly mil lionaire. ! The. girl's expression was one of disgust and anger. She stopped sev eral feet short of the plane. . "Oh, d ni Why the rush? We're out of sight now, I'm going to take a it"'':'''.'':S;-,:i -,;.' Y:y Her . father was beyond words; As she let go of his arm he slumped down with a suddenness' that al most pulled Huxby over on top of him. The mining engineer peered back through the spruces, and around at the thicket where Garth lay In wait : ' "Just one more go, darling," be appealed., "Thei-f allow i must know how to handle bis rifle. If he comes In sight of the plane before, we get out of rang please sweetheart I Remember it means millions to us millions I I'll give yon that emer ald necklace we saw at Tiffany's." - "Ton certainly will I And Dad will do more. I'm to bave a third In this mine that yoa say Is worth so much. Is that clear?" ' "Yes,' darling; take hold," Huxby Urged. "We both agree." ' She waved i him i towards , the plana "Fetch a flask.' We'll never get him aboard without a bracer." , Huxby, n to vault up on the wing. The girl had pointed out the bbvlous fact Her father was in a state of collapse from overexertion. He could not .move until revived; and he was too heavy for them to lift bodily. , , (TO BE CONTINUED) . y '''"'"' ''"''":-y . Ragweed Generally Unpopular - : Ragweed Is viewed with loathing by bay fever victims.'..' It Is also an enemy to the farmer, for It Is a host plant for the common stalk i borer end fur colon tbrlpv iiabout: :V'.: d, "ffi ;;;..'-... -i i '. " : -i;iTsSeaVrts.,Jtfcs.'. Hawaii SANTA MONICA; CALIF To me, the biggest, most tragic story in the week's papers was not a war In Africa, or i Mexican, border raid,1 " or; the passing of a gallant American soldier. It was. a little press dis patch from an Ohio town , where a' twelve-ytar-old boy lived.' ,' Thp fm"v wan on relief, the fa-j ther out of work. 'There was no tood in the house, no pennies to buy food with. The lit tle chap owned a rabbit The par- ents voted that the the pot to put strength Into trie stomachs of the hungry brood. Their son was hun gry, too. But his rabbit was his pet his one possession. Irvln 8. Cobb. So he went and banged himself with a loop of frayed clothes-line. People, Including some who have plenty of It for themselves, are given to saying money isn't every thing. Maybe not, but it'll buy quite a lot of things. Just a little money In that poor household would have bought a boy's life. ' And a boy, who so. dearly loved a dumb and helpless thing that he died rathet than see It die, might have grown np to be somebody in a world which needs all the compassion and all the loving It can get e e The Lion and the Lamb, XTO MATTER who gets Involved J-l in it or how this Ethiopian war turns out watch motherly old Britain emerge from the mess with something valuable territories, concessions, mandates or what have yon? tucked away in ber commo dious bread baskets. Any time the Hon and the lamb lie down togeth er, the lamb stays down provided It's the British lion you're thinking of. Let those who will, fight the bat tle and foot the bills. All John Bull asks Is a chance to exercise the benevolent process of absorp tion, digestion and assimilation, There's one appetite has stood the test of the ages. For the valor of her sons, per haps It's fitting that as a symbol, England should bave Leo. but If you're picking something to typify ber policies, my choice would be the tapeworm. e e e Today' Steia Song. THINGS never come out right In this faulty world. Just as Professor Einstein, the scientist, ar rives with a targe crate of fresh relativity. Gertrude Stein, the poet, goes hence. For years I have been waiting to see these two massive minds brought under the same bulging roof, hoping then they'd take on a Job which lesser Intellects could never cope with. I wanted her to explain bis theory and I wanted blm to explain her poetry, I even had the welcoming chorus fixed up: For It's always fair weather, when good mysteries get together, with Einstein on the table and a Gertrude ringing clear I e e What Thi Country Need. A LADY" writes In, wishing to know what this country needs the most Would It be more citizens who'll quit cussing the kind of govern ment tbey get for long enough to go to .the polls. Just once, and vote? Or more patriots who'll quit wav ing Old Glory long enough to help smoke out some alien enemy hid ing In, the folds of tbe flag be hates? - Or fewer" of those anti-Roosevelt Hes who still go on the apparent assumption that when the Presi dent promised to give business breathing spell, he meant sneezing spell? Or-fewer.of those pro-Roosevelt ltes who still think any honest crit icism of the man Jn the White House. 1. Just, the same as breaking the second commandment? But, lady, since you're asking me. I say what this country needs most Is a Mae West Joke to end all Mae West jokes. .,..,.'- a e The Hunting Seaion. WITH the open season Impend , Ing, certain sportsmen again are,; declaring ' that, because our hunters should have more ducks and geese' to shoot at the govern meat, ought to stop the Alaskan relatives from eating the eggs of wildfowl. But . Isn't It sort of true that those .benighted Eskimos rob tbe aaata .because they're hungry? ' Pve shot si) over this country and Canada hope, to keep on do ing so, too but . I've yet to run across the gunner, professional m amateur, who was. out there shoot ing because his family might Starve to. death If he didn't bring home some Bucks, Still, why worry about a lot of. Yukon Indians? They don't vote, don't . even buy anything: on tbe Installment 4lan. , . IRVIN 8. COBB. ' ft North American yrwiMrar Alllenee j . Ina, W(iU-8rvic . ' 'y4v HORE pR.MMES WBARTON Aai'.. The Alkalia Reeerva '; NE of the 'point that is' V-; often forgotten in reduc ing weight is that as the weight goes off, owing, to the food in take being reduced, therei is a tendency to acidosis that list less, tired feeling that makes the Individual feel that he or she Is faint from lack of food. It Is Often not the tack of food so much as not enough, of fruits, and the Lcpttlng down on white potatoes, that IB UIB&lUg 11IO U1VUU wwoww. alkaline than they should be. You are bearing and reading a great deal about acidosis the et- fectg npon tne ty0tem of "acld- forming" foods. Yon are told that as a nation we eat too much of the acld-formlng foods eggs, meat, fish, breads, cereals, pastries, and jiot enough of the base or alkali-forming foods milk, fruits, vegetables and nuts. The result Is the condition known as acidosis In which we feel "tired" all the time Just as If we had worked hard physically. This Is because these foods Dr. Barton and hard work both form acids; acids consume a great amount of oxygen and so we feel tired. The best alkaline foods or alka Ilnlzers are the fruits, which not only have an acid taste but do con tain acid. This Is due to the fact that the acid, we taste (organic) Is the kind the body can easily burn up or oxidize as fuel In the tissues, while the rest of the fruit contains a great amount of base or alkall formlng elements, so that an alka line ash is left In the body after the food Is burned in the tissues. 'About the only organic acids which the body cannot burn are found In cranberries, rhubarb, prunes, and plums. Apples, bananas, oranges, musk melons, raisins, peas, beans, and white potatoes are foods which have been found to be very efficient In reducing the slight acid condi tion of the body caused by eating too much of the acid-forming foods for a long time. As mentioned above tooi' much acld-formlng food uses up too much of your body energy In try ing to overcome its acid qualities, and you feel lazy and listless. Thus lecturers and health writers do well to warn yon about acidosis which Is the name given to these symp toms. In fact, so Insistent are some of these writers and lecturers about the danger of acidosis that there Is actually set up In some Individuals who follow this advice too closely a condition of "alkalosis," where the blood and tissues are too alka line to do their work properly. Now we all want to be at our best, to be not only able to work but anxious to do It, and while we must eat the acid formers eggs, meat, fish, brehd, and cereals to maintain tbe "structure" of the body and supply energy, we must not eat so much of them that so much oxygen is used up in burning or oxidizing them that we are left listless and tired. Because, after all, our "snap" or "pep" depends to a great extent In maintaining the "alkali reserve" of the body. Any departure from this alkali reserve, that allows the blood and tissues to get more nearly to the acid con dition means Just that mucb lack of energy or desire to work. Another Important point Is that our resistance to Infection Is les sened if the alkali reserve Is not maintained. "Recent experimental work has produced quite conclusive evidence that resistance to the or ganisms of infection depends to a large extent In maintaining an ex cess of tbe alkali elements In the tissues." This explains why our mothers, without knowing much about alkali reserve, gave us, as youngsters, the half or more tea spoons of baking soda when our stomachs were upset, or we were threatened with a cold. It Is real scientific treatment to give baking soda under these circumstances. The thought, then, Is that the blood and tissues in good health contain more alkali than acid ele ments and your best health depends upon maintaining this alkali reserve. Generally speaking most of us would be well advised to eat "more" of the alkali-forming foods. e The Weight-Reducing Drag In an editorial on dlnltrophenol, because of Its widespread use, the Journal of the American Medical Association states; - "There seems to be agreement at present that dlnltrophenol Is a drug with a certain degree of danger when used without supervision, Its gale should be f restricted to that ordered by the physician's prescrip tion and Its use by medical men should be -carefully -. supervised. Probably it should ' be used only when reduction of excess weight Is Important and when the ordinary reducing diets bave failed.' : " - t WNW Serrtee, elk 'l';'-V; FOOTPRINTS OF DINOSAUR ailners In a coal mine at Chand ler, Cbie., recently found the foot prints of a giant dinosaur, wblcb must have waded through the mud some 5,000 years ago,, reports the Seattle Post Intelligencer. ';t . DOCTOJSJUIOV Mothers redd this: mtiirira - lUftlRl A cleansing dote todag; a smaller auanlitg tomorrow; less each time, until bowels need no help at au. Why do people come home from a hospital with bowels working like a well-regulated watch? The answer is simple, and it's the answer to all your bowel worries if you will only realize it: many doctors end hospitals use liquid laxatives. If you knew what a doctor knows, yon would use only the liquid form. A liquid can always be taken in gradually reduced doses. Reduced dosage is the secret of any real relief from constipation. Ask a doctor about this. Ask your druggist how very popular liquid laxatives have become. They give tbe right kind of help, and right amount of help. The liquid laxative generally used is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It contains senna and cascara both natural laxatives that can form no habit even in children. So, try Syrup Pepsin.' Yon just take regulated doses till Nature restores regularity. Fracz Josef Fiord The 25,000 square miles in the re lon of Franz Josef Fiord of Green land Is reported to be rich In Arctic inlmals and plant life. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No' matter how many medicines you bave tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial Irritation, you can get relief now with Oreomulsloii. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomul alon, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mem branes as the germ-laden phlegm. Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, dont be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Oreomulslon and to refund your money If you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Pet Oreomulslon right now. (Adv.) Sentinel's Inquiry According to army regulations the correct Inquiry of a sentinel on guard Is, "Halt! Who is there?" My Ideal Remedy for HEADACHE Though I ha- tried m food ranedie Capndina ultfi me best. It b onlck and srentl.' For headache, neuralgic, or mus cle aenca. and periodic pains, osa aitber Capndina Liquid or Capadina Brand Tablets. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM MM Dandruff -8tof Hair Fkillov iMiurt. Cuilor and t lllaaillj In Uray and radennair eandl.(at DrmnrUU. gHheaxCham. War,.. Fatenogqe.N.Y. H 111 J to Grw and Faded Hair FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for nae in eooiMetioowitkParker'l Hair Ba!sam.Makee the hair eoft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at drug gtsta. Hiecox ClMniicai Worka, Patchog-ue,N.Y. Quick, Complete Pleasant ELIMINATION Let's be bank. There's only one way lot your body to rid itseli of the watte mat ten that causa acidity, gas, headaches, bloated feelings and a down other dis comforts your intestines must function. To make them move quickly, pleas antly, completely, without griping. Thousands of physicians recommend Milnia Wafers. (Dentists recommend Milneata wafers aa an efficient remedy lor mouth acidity). These mint flavored candy-like wafers are pure milk of magnesia. Each wafer is approximately equal to a full adult doae of liquid milk of magnesia. Chawed thoroughly in accordance with the direc tions on the bottle or tin, than swallowed, they correct acidity, bad breath, flatu lence, at their source and at the same time enable Quick, complete, pleas ant elimination. Milnaaia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and 48 wafers, at 35c and 60o respec tively, or in convenient tins containing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately aa adult dose of mflk of magnesia. All good drug stores carry them. Start using these delicious, effective wafers today. . Professional samples sent free to reg istered physicians or dentists if request is-made on professional letter head. SELECT PRODUCTS, Ineerporated 440S IM at, Ut telaiM Ctty, M. T. j ...... Tt 1 I 74
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 31, 1935, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75