rKlDAY, JULY 23, 1313. TII2 AillEVILLS GAZSTTE-NU77S PACH 1172 JIM SIM ITS HOnniOLE! . DON'T STAY BlLIQUS, CONSTIPATED Guarantee "Dodson's Liver Tone" Will Give You the Best Liver and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had. Calomel makes you sick; you lose-a y'l work. Calomel la quicksilver d It saliyatea; calomel Injures your er. ' Jf you are bilious; fee) lazy, sluggish id all knocked out. If your bowels e constipated and your head aches stomach is sour, just take a spoon i of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone steatt of using sickening, salivating domol. Dodson's Liver Tone Is real ver medicine. You'll know It next lorning, because you will wake up eeling fine, your liver will be work-. g, your headache and dizziness gone, our stomafch will be sweet and bowels gular. You will feel like working, ou'll be cheerful; full of vigor and nbition. Your druggist or dealer sells you a 50. cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone under my personal guarantee that It will clean -your sluggish liver better than nasty calomel: It won't make you sick and you can eat anything you want without being salivated.' Your druggist guarantees that each spoon fu.1 will start yourN liver, clean your bowels ,and straighten you up by morning or you get ypur maney back. Children gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone because it is pleasant and doesn't gripe or cramp or make them sick.' M am 'selling millions of bottles of Dodson's Liver Tone to people who have found that this pleasant, vegeta ble, liver medicine takes the. place of dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle oh my sound, reliable guarantee. Ask your druggist about me. , , jTBTE OV'TS EATHLR FEOLIl flfiiiHII ISii , AUSTRALIA TO HEMP k Australia Taking Steps to Aid Mother Country With- ' War Materials. Vrtjl Cost $21,000,000, Open Up . Million and Half Acre3 of Land. NEWS OF LOCAL IT SOLD ERS ii Members of First Regiment Now in Camp at More ' . head City. PEDT GRIMED JO BOH WITH BOMBS Bomt s to be Thrown at Captain Reynolds, Unloaded, How everDash Today. Melbourne, , Australia,- July '' 23. Steps are being taken by the common wealth government : state ' govern ments and by firms and individuals to xjr to supply the Imperial government trith munitions, in view of the enor mous importance in this war of un ceasing provisions of shells and the like. The general idea is to organize the facilities of Australia in this direction, and' to this end, the Minister for De fense, Senator George F. Pearce, has named a special committee to go into the correlative . questions , of ' the amount and character of he war ma. erial being furnished the federal government by Australian manufac :urers; the government's own manu-'acturers- of war material; and the' contracts now ' in force ..between the aritish war jBfflce and the Austarllan manufacturers. This, committee, which will be almost a departmental body in its functions,' will co-operate with committees . which are" to be chosen by commercial, bodies. Besides this the Australian chamber of manufactures has been asked by the Defense department d appoint a committee of experts to go into tho subjects of marshalling the ' various trades and., ascertaining the. capacity of'coch factory. By these means It Is expected a more or less definite, knowledge win be gained of what Australia can do to assist .Great Brt- iain and hov rendered.' Meanwhile companies and employ era all over Australia are showing the greatest desire and willingness to sup ply munitions, but are awaXtlng dlrec- tions, -" t '. y ' 'In reference to arr.muniyon for small arms, Senator Pearce said Jn a ; recent interview that the common wealth wax already fully capable of mere than supplying its own requlre ments nnd the fcdrplus Was being put "into, the common fund of the Empire."-.There hatj. however, been a great deal of discussion in the Federal Parliament and in newspapers to the effect' that the,, shortage of rifles for the Australian forces is v.ery serious. that assistance canjbe Adelaide, South Australia,1' July 2l What Is hailed as inaugurating ' a new and important eta in the indus trial development of the Australian commonwealth was the laying at Blanchetown on the river' Murray, June 5, of the foundation atone of the first lock of a great system of . locks and weirs, which will harness this great waterway to the better uM of the Australian people. The system together with the water storages at Lake Victoria and Cumberoona, will provide for irrigation on a huge scale as well as the use of the Murray wa terway for trade and commerce. - What the Nile is to Egypt, and" the Mississippi is to the United States the Murray is to Australia. The Murray river system is one of the longest navigable in the world, at times for more than 8,000 miles. " - For something like half a century the control of its waters has been a vexed question, in. the politics of the three states most vitally concerned New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia and because successive governments have been unable to agree, upon a basis of settlement - of riparian rights, the potential wealth of the river has been allowed to' pour itsel unchecked into the sea agi gantic waste lit a continent where the chief desideratum is water.. The cere monies at Blanchetown therefore sig nalized an hlstoria event. When car ried to completion, the project will open up about 1,600,000 acres for cul tlvatlon, and It la estimated, will bring in' an additional population of from 600,000 to 760,000 persons. - . ; UCE.VSKD TO WED J. M, Newton and Lena E. Bram- mer. ''."' VICTOR MOORE AT THE PRINCESS TODAY Victor Mnore will be at the Princess today In what is said to be a laughable picture version of the Irish-America produced by the Jesse L. Lasky com pany. All those who remember Vic tor Moore as the milkman in "Snobs" wfll doubtless anticipate- a treat as that impersonation was full of humbr and in "Chimmie Faddeu" fre is said to have even better opportunities for fun making, . . " .' , '. Morehead City, July 23. The first regiment of the North Carolina Na tional guard arrived here Tuesday morning In three sections and were all encamped by t o'clock. They de trained in a prompt : and orderly manner, characteristic of this regl ment, and immediately took up their duties in the camp. From 10 to 11:30 in the morning sighting position and aiming drills .were held by the twelve companies under tlif supervision of the regular army officers, , detailed here for' the Instruction of the state guard. :v. , -. - ' .'.';, The dally work begins at 6:15 o'clock each morning, at which time every one rises at the call of the bugle. In the forenoon three drills of an . hour each are held. The flrsj of the drills held will be the company drill In extended order. The' stcond, sighting drill and aiming instruc tion; third estimating distance in struction. Four companies flra on the target range while three companies make the targets, the remaining flVe companies drilling and furnishing the guard. Lights are required to be out Jat 8:45 o'clock, but the men are not required to be In camp until ll:o o'clock, , 'The first regiment is under com mand of Colonel J. T. Gardner, , of Shelby. Other field- officers are Lieu tenant Colonel J. C. Bessent of Winston-Salem; Major D.D. Flanigan, of 8tatesvtlle; Major D C. Paris, of Mount Airy; Major J. E, Dietz, of Statesville. ; , Staff officers are Captains W. R. Robertson, J. F. Roberts, Commis sary O. F. Jurenman, Inspector-In structor Hospital .corps, J. F. Jen kins,. Quartermaster, Chaplain Swope of Shelby. Captain R. R. Morrison, assistant inspector small arms prac tice. . The regimental band is from Ashe- vllle and all twelve of the companies In camp are as follows: Company A, Hickory, Capt. G. L. Lyerly; com pany B, Gastonla, Capt. E. L. Bull winkle; . company C, Winston, Wln- ston-Salem, Capt. J,. C. Wooten; company. D, Charlotte, Capt. J . B . Parser; company E, .Statesville, Capt. W. W." Westmoreland; company F, Ashevllle, Capf C. F. Felmet; com pany G, Shelby, Capt. J. A. DePrlest; company H. Wayncsville Capt. J. H. Howell; 'company I, Mount Airy, E. C. Blvens; contnany K, Ashevllle, Capt O. I. Bard; company L,xcon- cord, Capt. L. A. Brown; company M, High Point, Capt A. T. Zolllcof fer. :''' s -' ' ' The medical officers are Major E. F. Glenn of Ashevllle and Captain W. H. Campbell of Statesville. A de tachment for the hospital corps from Rutherfordton la In qamp. The army officers are Capt. Russel C. Langdon, Instructor-Inspector on duty in North Carolina and his as sistant. Captain Bernard .Sharp, TJ. S, A. "Captain O. F. Snyder, 17th U. S1., infantry, is on duty, as assistant to Caotaln Langdon In charge of rifle practice. Major S. Glenn Brown, of Greensboro, the brigade instructor of small arms practice, Captain C. F. Craven of the quartermaster corps, N. . C. N. G., Is on duty as camp quartermaster. Sergeant William B. Caddy. U. S. A.. Sergeant Instruc tor. , . , i (food Merchandise BOB LluidlZ 1 Service Desiring "to dash at breakneck speed on horseback up Patton ave nue, with a shower of unloaded bombs falling all around him," Cap tain Robert R. Reynolds, who stated that this scene was part of the film "Captain Bob of the National Guard" which is being made here, appeared before- the city commissioners and was granted a permit. The ride will be made this afternoon and Captain Reynolds stated that he would as sume all responsibility for personal injury or injury to buildings. The v commissioners authorized Commissioner Stikeleather to go to Atlanta to arrange for the purchase of one .or more sanitary wagons. which It Is understood that the city of Atlanta is willing to sell at a greatly reduced price. ' V The city agreed, to pay for 60 feet of Bidewalk between Patton avenue and Walnut street, along Lexington avenue, at L. Blomberg's request, Mr. Blomberg to pay for the remaind er. ."' -. V; " Several minor matters were brought before the board. : BUCHAREST THE GAYEST CITY IN EUROPE NOW War Has Brought a Great Deal i - of Money Into ' Roumania. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS O. M. Rogers and wife to J. Howser, property near the National Casket plant; consideration $200. Announcing the jflrrival of WdSummer (foments Special Purchases Jhat Our Buyer ftas J'ent On A store is no greater than its ability to buy. Our buyer, now in New York, called on a number of our eastern connections and picked up some very exceptional values in Waists, Skirts and Dresses. We hope to have them marked up and ready for your reviewing this morning. ' Owing to the tremendous volume of our late summer v business we are able to buy quantities of summer garments at prices that in the early season would sound absurd. . New Waists, more than one hundred dozen, lingerie and wash silk, are priced at. .................... . .... . 95c to $6.00 New Dresses, a large number in new style effects, marked to sell quickly at ........... . . . .............. $4.85 to $12.50 :' New Skirts, corduroy and taffeta, rose, sand, blue, green, taupe . . and white, priced specially at $6.50 New Coats, corduroy and chinchilla, better grades; white, rose, blue and yellow, priced at. ........... . $12.50 and $15.00 i Bucftarest, July : 23. Bucharest, long known as the "pocket Paris" now boasts of being the gayest .city In Eu rope. The war has brought a great deal of money into Rumania, and those who have benefitted are staying at home tospend their new-found for tunes, for there is little to attract a traveler these days to Paris, or Vienna or London. Much of the money is the result of ' Rumania's excellent bar gaining witi Austria and Germany for her last wheat crop ana for other ar ticles of wartime need. It is sufficiently easy to spend money In Bucharest, and it is part of the cult of the fity that pleasure can only be commensurate with outlay. Most articles of clothing cost five times as much' here as in Paris or London. The hotels ask 36 a day for a very ordinary room, and meals are correspondingly costly. The Women of Bucharest model their style ad carriage closely after the example of Paris, but jiof the chastened 'Paris of wartime. Femi nine heels are higher in Bucharest than anywhere else In the world, and the Eastern temperament of Rumania alloiv's more exaggeration In the use of rouge and powder than Paris would sanction. The men that is, the men of the fashionable set would be call ed too well dressed In London or New York. Society appears at Its best' In the afternoon, when everyone that aspires to be anyone goes for a drive on the Chaussee. The horse-drawn vehicle is still quite the thing, with coachman and driver l.i velvet livery and silken sash of gaudiest color. , After the drive comes five-o'clock tea, taken either at home or in one of the fash ionable cafes. Tea Is followed by a leisurely promenade down the Callea Victoria, which is the Riverside drive of Bucharest and like it the starting1 point of many a romance. . The evening is taken up with dinner and the theater. Then at midnight, when the concerts and theaters are finished, the night cafes open. There are Cabarets and dance halls by the score, and everywhere plenty of nu 8ic. Prices are on a scale which It' would be hard to beat in New York. The best supper places offer custam ers a varied entertainment the latest Tango dances, "the newest, wildest Hungarian music from zlmbals and pan-pipes, and vaudeville numbers of many, types. Flower women and child beggars in great numbers' haunt the neighbor hood of the cafes until almost dnwn. They are allowed to enter even tho best restaurants and circulate around among the tables, where they gather a few coins and many bits of food. . The afternoon promenade on the Sallea Victoria strikes the foreign vis itor as a little freer and more uncon ventional than anything of the zame kind to be found in European or American cities. The man who smiles at a lady he does not know Is not con sidered a person to be frowned upon, but Is rather regarded by the majority as a commendably dashing and gal lant fellow. , Professional Men Should Be Heard Man of Unquestioned Integrity Indorses Remarkable Tonic. Prof. Southern Industrial Institute MAJESTIC THEATRE TODA AND TOMORROW BROADWAY BEAUTIES MUSICAL COMEDY CO. in . ' "Gay Coney Island" Matinee at... ...... .3:15 Nights .........8:15-9:30 All Seats ............ 10c 10c ... . . . . . . . . . , . . . 20c Special Matinee Tomorrow Children will be admitted to Saturday matinee upon presentation of Are cents and a potato! $2.00 will be awarded to the child bring ing the largest potato! Children, bring your potatoes Saturday after noon. All potatoestfeceived will be donated to the poor of. the city. (Copy from Charlotte Observer). The following testimonial -Is from a professional gentleman living in Char lotte, N. C, bftlng in fact one of Its leading citizens. Prof. E. Kirby, teacher of mathematics at the Indus trial Institute. The condition to which this man was reduced was a matter of unlveal comment throughout the Carolina. Suffering as he did from Htomach trouble and dysentery, h vts haunted the very best medical talent a be found In both states. His cure s the talk of every one who knew jlm. Now this jnan holds a position ircond to none In his chosen profes- lon In this city and this fall is teach K at the Qlenwood College St Cos tonla. He says: 4,1 -oa at the Baptist University at "I cannot say too much in praise bfl Greenville, 8. C.,' and three bottles Olobe Tonic, for I suffered over three! cured' me and since I have been the years from indigestion and during 1 means of leading, many others Into this time I -was in the hands of Dhysl-jthe new light which I hae found. I clans but the relief they afforded met will always "help you all I can In my ws only temporary und many times! Individual capacity. All-that need be they were totally jnr.ble to give tem- Is to have a person try It, the medl porary tl!ef from pain. I steadily cine will commend Itself, for It Is a grew worse, my Indigestion gradually certain winner. I recommend Globe developed into Chronic Dysentery and 1 Tonic to all sufferers of Indigestion from this I suffered for over . one year. I took pepslfl before I ate, bis muth afterward, and pancreatln be tween times but nothing reached my and stomach trouble." Now this is the very same medicine that Is being demonstrated hers In Ashevllle at corner of Pack Square discos and no one uan realise how J I nnd College street. We want you to hmvm anrfArml. I stumbled across I know the truth about Olobe Tonic and Globe Tonlo In the latter part ofis.ik Vou to call. We will give yo a September, by accident while i free sample for we want you to try It The merit of the medicine will speak for Itself. We ask you to Investigate what we say for we will' testify by oath If need be, that the above testi monial' or any that we give you are unsolicited and genuine. Call today, Pack square and College street and try the FREE SAMPLES or If you want Globe Tonic at home we will sell while advertising $1.00 bottles for BOc, three for $1.25. Tour money back if you are not benefited from the first bottle. Call today and try the free samples. These are the gen uine Globe Tonic Remedies and "not Globe Medicines" and are not peddled from door to door or sold' on the street and never have been, so take warning. Adv. Rome, July 23. The Leonardo da Vinci, of whom the world thinks only as a great painter, is now set forth in the Italian papers as a great prophet of what might come to pass In war fare. In the latter part of. the Hf teenth century his versatile genius in cluded skill as a scientist, engineer, mechanician and architect, as well as a painter and musician, and his im agination led to the design of many remarkable Implements of war, among which was a steam gun which was run by boiling water. In this invention, incidentally, it Is said he anticipated the steam engine. In certain of his works he told of several forms of bombarding engines, one of which threw minute particles, like a storm of hall, producing quan tities of dense smoke to frighten the enenty. Among his papers are found what may be called1 the ancestors of the terrible cannon for throwing burning liquid at a great dlstam-e. which the Krupp and Essen factories are said to have turned out. "There will Issue from the earth," he write, "that which, with frightful sounds, will deafen the surrounding and with Its breath will kill men and ruin cities and fortresses." He suggested the THE HOTTER THE DAY; THE MORE DANGER Keep the Ice Chest well-filled don't let the milk sour and the food spoil. PHONfc 72 FOR ICE. Asheville Ice Co. fi TV7o Vi mm inct frriiar tti o. shipment of KLAXON HORUS y Both hand and mct5r driven. Ask tor prices. D. a Shaw Motor Co. 52-60 Broadway. use of a powder which would atun aivi suffocate the enemy, and at the same suggested a remedy. "To send poison in powder," he said, "be careful to have a wind which wfll not send the powder upon yourself, or have the nose and mouth covered by a thin wet cloth, so that the powder cannot pass'. He left sketches of mortars and other heavy ensigns of war which suggest the modern heavy and quick firing guns, and seemed even to have Imagined a submarine and aeroplane Of the former, he wrote, according to the quotations given In the Italian papers, "I do not publish or divulge my way ot staying under water be cause of the bad, nature of men, whs would use It for assassination undet the sea, by ripping open the bottom of ships." XSRY ON THE JOB. SOME BOYS ARE LUCKIER THAN OTHERS. YOU KNEW THAT BEFORE, BUT LOCK- i Copyright, 115, International News Service, . .jz.mr 1 f aia. vjQvrr piu. our rwci . .. t u&-kjon-Go upA Soute avtovL 5'4V,i 0-ia!I GOTTA .-rT'V Vf ' I AWuCfPON AND GET A PlO 6HN.0OtH SK ( POWPETQCT ESCOKrF ffi tiW'WfXk tt -WW CM. v V Sl ' VWWQ(Q-M0U s AviOTAVS AOWfitTD J&& . INOOrtf -MOT A ). &7?.T5?

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