Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Feb. 15, 1916, edition 1 / Page 4
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. . , r; .- " .t 'I S : ; W 4 1 ::;;: i ; r -i. PAGE FOUE The Asheville PCBLISIIED BY EVENING NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY APHEVIIXE. N. & W. A. Hlld-brand L. R. Duval . . . . . SIBSCRIPTION RATES Ashevflle and Biltmore On Week .. $ .10 Three Month . , l.Si Six Months ............ 2.B0 Twelve Month 'i 6.00 Any matter offered for publication that Is not classified as new, giving notice or appealing or project where an admittance or other fee Is charged. Is advertising and will bs accepted at regular rates only. The same applies to cards of thanks, obituary notices, political announcements and the like. The Gazette-News Is a member of The Associated Press, telegraph news is therefore complete and reliable. Entered at the Postofflce In Tuesday, February 15, 1916. ARMOR PLATE PLANTS. If the armor plate interests are threatening-th- are accused pf doing', there Is no cruestlott as to the nrowr nror.edur. The government should call their blue and build Its own plant. It may possibly be unfair to con strue as a threat the statement, made before the senate committee on naval afiairs, on behalf of the private armor plate men. Their position, however, nema peculiar, to say the least. They say they have invested $20. 000,000 In an industry which Is so specialised that If the government undertaken to make its own armor their ' plants ' must be dismantled. They are not making much money at best; and if they are to be deprived of government patronage they must j 'to. pursue his studies of the life and raise the price of armor enough to j language of the "bamlai--log." the get back that $2". 00(1,000 before they monkey-people. AVhen first Trof. Gar go out of business. That may mean nor declared that it might be possible adding $2"0 a toil to the price of the j learn ipe-tallc he was the laughing armor plate the government will need ! stock of all who heard of hitn. He is for its new warships. j "o longer laughed at by scientists. The manufacturers also say - that! For twenty-live years the profe.-wor the $11, "00, ooii -'government -plant llas 1"''" spending much of hla time contemplated in tho Tillman bill ' ln "rotig cages in' A fries-n Jungles, lis would ha'e double the rapacity re- ll nd watching the ways of tho fluired to furnish all the armor the . J'mgle-peoplo. Moving-picture oam tfnlted States has ever used, This is!, rua ."'".' aid htm on this expedition, obviously inconsistent, with the .fore-:'"s WL" as the phonographs ho In going statement. ran they hrn e i ' ' "" llsir: ' for some time, lie hopes $20,000,Ooo actually invested in an j 10 '-"'Hiiro two or three voung gorillas enterprise for which $j,."0O,00O would l :i!lJ vhimpanzees for the Hroux Zoo in suffice? The discrepancy arouses sus- e w Vurk. as well as valuable si ecl- plcion of watered stock and excessive profits. It may he recalled that a congres sional invcKti-4.it ion in lS'.M showed that the "i'.rmor plate monopoly" was charging tho Vnited Htates $540 a ton for armor which is sold regularly! to foreign governments for $249 ion. There has been no such glaring discrimination revealed in recent 1 years, but there isn't much doubt In ! the public mind that the big numu- ' facturcrs are making plenty of profit out of I'nelo Sam. The government has tml.i tunm -lid than $100,000,000 to the Carnegie,! Bethlehem and Midvale ompanies! for armor plate, at an average cost I of $4!!!t a ton. Congressman Ta-en-her, who has been making a special i Ktudy of lh subject. bchev-H that 1 the government could make its own armor for $300 a ton. If it r-,n rf. ' feet one-half, or ono-fotmh of the i saxine Indic t,. .v. . ' s "o"oi ny tnat tigure, the i B.mmn( naa fetter go Into tho business. And If the big steel Inter MtM try to browbeat the government, that Is all the more reason for declar ing Independence of private control in a matter so vitally affecting our latlonal Interest and safety. CONS I'M PTTO V COXQI EllFn. There 1, a prevalent relief that tu- I ...i..i.. . . ! iw eiiurcy en m- mated trorn a community Most per- sons cllns f tho old notion that the j cllscaj Is Inherited. Others persist In I th belief tht ...... -in . '"-'"" ir n-j matter what preventive cf forts may be made by Individuals or the community. According to Dr. Victor Helsler. writing In tha Journal of Outdoor Life these views are absolutely rfuted by , tbm eixporlenc of Victoria, Australia, mat sta'.e I reported to be wholly ire rrom consumption. And its free dom la attributed solely to th ra tlonal methods used for many -far to combat tho plague. Dr. Helsler, who formerly had charg of nnllation In the Philippine ha spent consider able time In Australia and speak from first hand Information. Victoria, he y, has a good cli mate, and th population 1 naturally vigorous. Htlll, tuberculosis had mad considerable headway befor th pres nt vstcm was adopted. Tubercular Immigrant' were then barred from the staU. A)l resident victim war aoucht out by Inspector and forced to submit I io a sciemmc regimen. It wn as umd that all were to have niodoni 1 nospital treatment. Most of Ihem wer trk.n forthwith to h.i.M..i wh.ra th. ....n. . . wh,r they usually recovered. Tho who gav satisfactory swuranec llm: ttmy would abide by the ho-iplinl riit- Mlattona thlr own houm i.er- mltt.4 t livo at hoiu,. w Gazette-News . ... Editor Business Manager By Mall, In Advance Three Months $1.00 Six Months ............ 1.00 Twelve Months 4.00 Its Asheville as second-class matter. regularly inspected. If two violations j of the ruIes weer Proved against them, i thT were tttken to hospital wtth- out more ado. The patients' sputum I TVb O rta .11. . (....,.., ...3 ' . . . . ."" acsiroyea. rj jiiuit-uicu irom in- jfectlon. Thet patients were made to sleep in the open air, and everybody was encouraged to do likewise. -Today, says Dr. Helsler, outdoor sleeping is almost unlverslal. It was a lot of trouble for a while, but it has paid Incalculably. And If an Australian community could make this wonderful record, why can't American communities do likewise? MOXKEY TALK. Prof. Xliehard L. Garner is about to I sail once more for the French Congo. mens for the Smithsonian institution in Washington. The field of human learning grows larger every day. Its ultimate possi bilities reach out beyond wildest ilieains. Learning to converse with animals mnv seem a useless way to spend a life and yet, who knows? Tnere wa ? Columbus. And there was Galileo. ;;: p . ,p, p :r v 9 , t. v m v v r r .... , . PRESS COMMENT n . . K w, r. m, w w, w w.v.mmm m e K s r. Farm Loans In the State. Tb Insurance compnnks are rapid ly increasing their loans on farm lands in North Carolina. In 1913 they hud loaned to our f:irmers SS2N O'.i'o- in 1 91 5 their loans amounted ."n i-.MT." flno. r nearly three times as much, 0, rr C- ,,V- Thompson, representing ,hP t(",lp offl,"e nf markets and rursl or"f"""""n. said to the congressional Joint committee It Is significant, thinks the 1'nivor- slty News letter. "It means that our agriculture In getting better balanced and better organized: that our Increase In fond crops and livestock guarantees the farm income and protects tho collateral from deterioration. H means decreasing risk and therefore lower rates of interest. The low rate on loans made by tho lnsorance com j panic on farm land force down rates I on loans made by the Insurnnc mm. ,horpr"r "nfer a large benefit on farm borrowers." Tno hundred and twentiv Inmiranc companies owning 99 per cent of the l"urancc assets of tho United States have lonn"A American farmers on l,Hna moni I - mwi i,aj,f nearly 1 uu, 000,000; and banks other than national hav. iioaneu tnem about tho same amount. Nearly a fourth of the Insurance loan money has gone to Iowa alone; and sevsn-eights of it to the 12 central states, a region devoted to food and reeu crops, livestock, and livestock Industries. Hera farm lands are high priced, but agriculture Is well bala.no cd, stable, and safe. As a result In terest rates on farm loan ar low, ranging from E.3 per cent In Wiscon sin to 8.7 per cent In North Dakota. The farm mortgage loan In North Carolina In 1915 were around $21,000, 000. About a tenth of this amount was carried by tha Insurance compa nies, a third by banks other than na tional; and th balance by mortgage loan companies and Individuals, The average rata on farm mortgage loans from all sources In North Caro lina 116, counting commissions, was 7.7 per cent; and this average was lower than ln all other southern states, Virginia and Kentucky alone excepted. Ths personal security an by banks to our farmers In 191$ amount ed tit It l.-JHO.OOfi H'-vnty-twn t.t our natlonni banks i-nrrM nl.nut two- ifthr ,rf tins umniint. un.l 400 nthsr 1'iinUn . arri- d th-; rr.... -ri,c- nmi l"".r :l rule, eoyntlna- t omnilwninrr, WM" r'pr ' 'r'' vera go varied K'5 rn' '" Mlx "oiiitlHln :.oMi,tl,s to 14 .fr,'".t In the ID cnun- lhH l-smlko nd lower Cape l'ar iei;;on. "A ' "lr Mu"r,,m show ih;.t th- ff'T"' Jit ' " N"r,h rMr"1 Wlmt lu U-JJ u u on time-accounts with the supply! mer chants, nobody, of course knows much about." says the News Letter, It would want a good deal of cnaly tlcal study to determine what effect, on the whole, the existence of these loans has had and will have on farm ing and farmers, An average interest rate, "counting commissions" of 10.2 I per cent is a burden for an Industry in the present condition of farming in Ncrth Carolina and the data pre sented by Dr. Thompson seem to show that that was the average fur as much money as was loaned on lands, the average rate for which was 7.7 Per cent. This would give us a general average rural credit rate of about 8.9 per cent. We have been sanguine all the while as to the result, even If a compromise, of the rural credits legislation by con gress. Ve still have hopes, although the present talk of a maximum inter est rate of six per cent is not so en-j eouragihg. This credit Ought not to cost more than four, certainly not over four and a half per cent, net. How ever, tho thing should adjust Itself. If they devise a first class, gilt-edged farm paper, as good as Girjnan farm paper, for Instance and they have the materials for constructing a se curity second to none on earth -there should be a premium that will put the cost of securing money on it at the very bottom rate for long-term invest ments of Immediately '-..convertible quality. Ureensboro News, '-.-' Bringing nn Indictment Against Wake Forest. It seems to have surprised, as well as delighted tho press of the state that something happened to the Wake Forest students who decorated the Trinity campus with the scoro of the basketball game that Trinity lost to Wake Forest, After all the Incident seems to have been overplayed, or, rather, not to have been understood correctly "Thousands of dollars damage done" was the first report, and it was generally understood to mean thousands of dollars' worth of material damage. Now, however, It appears that the destruction of prop erty amounted to $r.n, which the Wake Forest 'Students paid. The rest of the wreckage -consisted' ' 'of the pride of Trinity's student-body, which Is a total loss: doubtless that was worth thousands of dollars in the es timation of the students, but outsid ers can - hardly - be expected to view it in that light. The gross exaggera tion of the first reports has served to put Trinity in rather a ridiculous at titude. - However, the 'prompt action of the Wake Forest faculty in suspending the guilty students, making them go to Trinity to apologize In person, and making them pay for the damage they had done, has pretty well served to exculpate that college in the eyes of tho public, i.:ut the Baptists have gone, a step further; they have put intercolleisialo athletics on probation lor the rest ol" the year, and the row that has been kicVed up has aroused many of tho trust - s, as well as other members of the Uenomhuitir n to an advocacy of the abolition of athle tics altogether. Ho radical a step could bo justified only on the assumption that sports manship has utterly duparted from the student body. If a college reach es the point where the desire, to win overwhelms the desire to play fair, a'hletii'M in that institution cannot be abolished too iuiekly. Uut the work of regeneration should not stop with i me piouiuiuoii or inn rcoiiegiale con tests. The loss of the spirit of lair play is after all merely a symptom. A college that doesn't insti',1 Int.. its students the instincts of a tcn'leman fails of its purpose. Jf the ability to discriminate between the essenital and the incidental ln lire is not the basis of wisdom, our philosophy is wrong from the foundations. A man whoso college education has given him nothing beyond tho ability to read a little Greek, to measure a not-too-dilllcult curve, to recognize tho names of Semlramls and Paracel sus, and to distinguish between the terms chromosome and chlorophyll, has wasted three-fourths of his money. A correspondence school can do all that, and do it more nuickly and more cheaply than any college. If a college Is not turning out edu cated men, It needs more than the abolition of athletics. If It Is turn ing out men who are educated In the true sense of tho term, athletics will help, rather than hurt It. The people who are demanding that Intercollegiate athletics he done away at Wake Forest are bringing a terrific Indlotment against the school one that will not He In the court of public opinion. Granting that there has been more trouble over athletic there In the past year than sver before ln the history of the school; granting that the faculty made a ghastly error In not taking prompt and vigorous action after the disgraceful affair at Charlotte last fau lt does not follow that the school de serves th stigma of being pronounc ed unable to Inculcate a decont spirit In Its students. Tho abolition of athletics would bo such a confession. Wafe Forest does not deserve to have It thrust upon hr.3rensboro News. Colonel House as Warwick. Wilson! A food many people have a sort of suspicion that President Wil son had something to do with cre ating his own success In politics, but ; according to Charles Willis Thomp- son In ths Nw York Times, Colonel House of Texas did ths Job. This vo racious chronicler discloses f that Colonel House Is consumed by a do sire to bs a political Warwick. He wanted to bs president-maker In 112 and cast about for a likely can didate. H first selected Mayor Ouy nor, but found him too eccentric. Next he approached Mr. Wilson, then Governor of New ersey, and a mag netic affection sprang up between tho two gentlemen. Then Mr House 'se cured Pryan's endorsement of Wilson, which was only granted on condition that the Istter would drop Colonel Marvcy, and ths latter was dropped The Opposition to Wilson tried un successfully to concentrate on Cover, nor Harmon of Ohio and next on representative I'nderwood of Ala bama. Frilling with both of these it selected Champ Clark and could hsvs nominated him had nto Hryan luuwltr rnl Oii a uu fHE ASHEVILLE GAZETTE more co-ention. The chronicler does not state that Bryan's reward was the secretaryship of state; but he does admit that before Mr. 'Wil son's Inauguration. Colonel House visited Bryan at the laser's winter home in Florida to discuss the make up of the rest of the Cabinet. Bryan was so ticked with his Job at the head o the cabinet that he accepted all the rest, although only two of them. Daniels and Burleson, were In timate friends. All of this is decided ly Interesting, and it probably explains Colonel House's eagerness to extend the scope of his endeavor and make It world-wide instead of national Leslie's Weekly. Care of Laying Hens. .verybody wants eggs in January and February, when they are worth their weight in silver, if not in gold, and strong healthy chicks in the spring: But these can be got only through the right care and feedimr of hens. As of course you know, different food materials contain different qual ities. Some give us the fat necessary for warmth; others, nitrogenous qaul-j ities, which forms flesh; still othe.s, minerals, such as lime, soda, etc., needed for bone and muscle: With the hen it is of groat lmnortance th.-t sne nave all of these different Ingre dients blended in her food, as she re quires them not only to sustain her In health, but also for the formation of eggs. ' We will start with the foods tint give the greatest quantity of lime, uecause it is needed for shell, .md some iracnonai part in the white an-ltion in reducing to ash the matter yolk most essential, for it is turned i containing these Ingredients. The us durlng Incubation into bone, the very I ual troubles assailing poultry on foundation of the Chicken. Clover 'most farms come the feeding only hay, linseed meal, and wheat bran lone of these elements. Poor Biddy contain about six pounds of lime In had all flesh and no warmth or all every hundred, and turnip tops, car rots, and all grasses have a goodly percentage. Flesh comes from nitro genous or albumenal middlings, bran. Clover liayc wheat. 111(1 skimmed milk. Fat and heat we get from car- bonaceons provender, among which i -in ann imcKwiieat lead, followed closely by oats, wheat, rye, clover! Views Of Briand The H IS resemblance in several char acteristics to Lloyd-George of England, who alao may be come a War-Premier before tho pres ent difficulties are over, is said to be one of the most Interesting facts about AriRtldo Briand, who now heads the Cabinet of France for tho third time. But the British Minister lias not copied in his labor dlflicul ties the tactics Briand used when faced with a great railway stril.e in France, when he served under Presi dent Fnllier'j. Brland's high-handed method of calling nil the railway em ployees to tl.a colors, and thus ex posing a persistent striker to charges of insubordination and breach of military discipline was instantly effi cacious, but earned for him adverse criticism and suspicion that havo done much to limit his official career up to the present. As a lawyer and kadcr of the revolutionary Social ists, remarks Ellis Randall in tho Philadelphia Evening Ledger, hla manner of procedure was mosi re markable. It Is said of him that Fifteen years had ho spent ln a sort of nomadic life, as barrister, as journalist, as trade-unionist orator, political organizer, congressman, general secretary to the French So cialist party. , "In spite of his splendid gifts," hla comrades used to say, "Aristlde will never make his fortune at the bar." "Why?" "Because the only clients he cares for are tho proletarian victims of our economic anarchy, whose gratitude is his reward. Optimist though he is, he feels acutely the injustice of the social state." "Gentlemen of the jury," Aristlde has been heard to exclaim, "in de- Vest Pocket Ess BT GEORGE PITCH THE PESSIMIST NOW and then on a porfectly magnificent day, which is 100 per cent, sunshine, a chilling darkness will suddenly tall upon sorao happy vicinity and life will become aoggjr and lumpy for several minutes. me say win still be an angelic blue, but somewhero In tho vicinity a pes- luiisi ib passing, A pessimist Is a man with a mental stomachache. It la worse than the ordinary stomachache, however, be cause 11 ia contagious. A real, dark Indigo pessimist will enter a crowd of happy, cheerful people, and In less than throe minutes these peoplo will be wontjerlng how life can be en dured under the uncertainty of not knowing whether or not business next week will be as bad as might easily be Imagined. A pesslmlHt Is human opera glass. If you look at sorrow through a pessimist It will be magnified 1,000 diameters. It is also possible, bv turning tha pessimist Inside out, to look at Joy through his eyes. This reduces them to so small a size that uey can easily be mistaken for mi crobes. A true pessimist can lay aside a telegram containing the news that his uncle has left him 1,000.. 000 and can wonder with tears In hla eyes how he will be ble to endure with leaky tires. A pessimist's faith basn't anything but a reverse clutch. Ho can t be lieve that good luck will continue or that bla children will grow up, or that times are going to bo better, or that the worJJ will dodge next year's comet but pall the reverse lever and bo .s a wonder. Ho will bellove any thing that bas a sob In tho future. He can take the poorhouso hills, ono bill to a loap. Tell him that good times will end, tomorrow and that begging la U become a naiioiv-j tu - NEWS .... j ATLANTA. 2Kb. hlih WHITBY, IX U. high ARROW LA R S To See Well CHARLES H. HONESS Optometrist nhd Optician 51 Pntton Ave. Opp. P. o. Our Ce-Hite Toric Lenses Are the Best hav, linseed meal and unskimmed milk. - Mineral matter lime, soda, pot ash, magnesia and sulphur Is prin- cln.'lllV formed hv tbA .Minn nf ilii-ad. fat and no flesh. Never allow the proportion to ex ceed what is needed for the purpose, or fat will be made and stored, neu- itrnliine- oil vmin Creen bono contains the neutral rmcat Juices, blood, gristle, oil, and . mineral matter in soluble condition which renders it easy of digestioin, es- The Press Brilliant fendi.g my client I am defending myself." Briand's popularity with the com mon people is said to be wide-spread. They recognlzo him in France, bs their fellow workers in England do Lloyd-GcorRe, to be one of them, and not a proud and unsympathetic po litical dignitary. They call him "ndre Aristae." When he speaks they listen, for he speaks direatly to them and he cpeaks appeallngly, as we learn. To Ii!l oratorical gifts Briand owes much for hli rapid though long do. layed rise to public prominence. As a boy he delighted in attending public meetings for the purpose of hearing the speakers. With a schoolfellow now a bootmaker at Saint-Nazalre, and proud of the new Premier's friendship he used to go assiduously to a Catholic church to profit by the eloquence o.' the preacher. On his entry Into the Clemenceau Cabinet, an Englishman wrote of Briand's voice "A penetrating voice, audiblo in Its lowest tones at the remotest corner of the Chamber, it is what Carlyle would call a 'downy' voice, a caressing voice, a coaxy voice; since Gambctta's the most teductlve heard in tho Palais Bourbon." Prland is somewhat tall for a renchTian and has tt slight stoop. His black, straight hair 1- brushed sti alght back from a square,- mas sive forehead. His fnce has usually a somewhat melancholy expression. His dark eyes look out with a tran quil, searching gaze. But the work men of Saint-Etienne most of them now gone to the war know his ge ,nlal, frank, unassuming manner, and say that "Our Aristlde 13 like our selves." Literary Digest. avs 1 time Inside of six weeks, snd ha would believe you It your llrgt nam was Ananias. A pessimist Is continually losing a game before it is begun, burying a The $ky vill be blue, but iometccre a pctilnitt is pouting child before tt Is born, engaging tho undertaker before tho doctor arrives, and losing bis monby 'uefore ho bas earned It t was a farmer pessimist wno anrvestcd a bumper crop with bard on tho land. But bo wasn't a circumstance to the railroad presi dent who views bis balance sheet shewing a I per rent dividend and t3.000.000 surplus and wonders with hopeless sobs where tho money Is to come from when another bog ear Dust bo replaced. , Pessimists are not pleasant, but tt would be a very easy thing to make them extremely usoful. A pessimist could be fertilised and tied up some where and planted to sausufooms wllA aroat firvOt COL I rj r "777771 LA v BATTERY PARK BANK ASHEVILLE, K. 43. Capital ... ... ....... ... ... ... ...$100,000.00 Surplus and Profits ..... . .... . . . . , . ... 190,000.00 OFFICERS: James P. Sawyer, Chairman of the Board. T. C. Cose, Pres Erwin Sluder, V.-Pres. C. Rankin, Cashier. No Loans are made by this Bank to any of Its Officers or Directors, pecially for birds almost all the components for jpggs (white, yolk and shell) in the most concentrated form possible. So, if eggs are to be come profitable, tho bone mill must be kept going. ..Now abcut the actual system of feeding. So long as there are less than a hundred birds, the morning mash can be made in the kitchen. Get large sauce pan or pail with a close fitting lid, Mix at night, and stand be hind the stove, where it will not be come quite cold. A mash is made of equal parts of ground corn, oatsi wheat bran, and two parts of graen hone. Just moisten with boiling wn, ter. Food for hens should be almo.rt dry, never wet, At noon give sprouted oats and some small grain, scatterel on the litter In the poultry hous Harlev and crnrkKH mm Won corn and cracked corn, or millet, oa.i be used in turn. At night the hensl win eat up all the whole corn in ten minutes. Kggs are half water. 10 ' there must be always a constant sup-1 ldv before the hlt-Hu Tm ai.i! weather it Is well to fill the drinking vessels three times a day with luke - warm water. A shallow box half fill - ed with fine coal ashes should be put where the sun will strike it, In the house or compartment, for the blr.ls to dust themselves In. Keep oyster Cartoons Of The Day 4CCIDE.TAL? Health Talks BY WILUAM BRADY, M.D. Flatul IN one of oar earlier talks we made the bald and unsclentlfio state ment that gas never causes pain or distress under any circumstances whatever; but that the conditions accompanying tho formation of gas, such as excessiva acid secretion or excessive acidity from fermenting food, muscle spasm (colic) and In flammation (chronlo appendicitis, duodenal or gastric ulcer, gallstones or chronlo Inflammation of the gall sac), are ths real causes of pain or distress In casca of "gas ln the stom ach." However, bavins' smlndnd tha bubble, it Is our duty to rescue tha victims of tho explosion from their unhappy fate. Bo we hasten to make amends by offering the following Il lumination of tho vexed subject of flatulenco, or gas In the stomach. Putting ssldo for future enrich tnent those coses of gallstones, chronlo appendicitis, stomach or du 1 odenum ulcer, angina pectoris, gas I tro-p touts (sagging and kinking) and plain arterlo-eclerosls, which make tho patient feel that there Is some thing wrong with his stomach and that bs can obtain relief by raising gas, wo still havo many Instances Foremost wo feel convinced, la gluttony overeating and too hasty eating. In a chronlo way over-eat Ing Is a proline factor of that sense of fulness and bloating that so many victims of high blood pressure and early arterial hardening experience Tho remedy hero Is Join tho Broad and Milk Club. Members exist on a diet of bree! (or crackers) and f.-T? J. - 1rr..,4 rm..!. . far tnttvUhuil nut, mA stapKMM. Tuesday, February 15. lgjg PUBLIC STENOGRAPHY Court and Convention R e p o r ting FRED F. WEDDEL 3 Electrical Bldg. Phone 916 A Leader-Results are our Want Ak Tfeu W j the way to Better rate 1 n 11 tot -. Fof f tOy XfrV -. i-'LLtJi WOrjGJ3 ! . 1 8,,ell in small hoppers or boxes nail, ! to the wall. Mothers' llagazlne 1 ' Typewriters rented $.1.00 per month J. M. Ileum und comnunv Pk... n. tf Tuthlll la St. Louii Stnr ence milk alona one day each week- meal every three hours or oftener, if desired, all day long and late Into tha night Or better still. If yon wish, remain on a pure milk diet for several daya or a week a large , glassful every two hours. Then gradually add one article of food after another to the diet. This Is excellent for tha stomach and still better for tho auto-intoxication and high blood pressure. Food stasis, or Intestinal stasis-' tha new term' for constipation is another common factor of flatulence. X-ray photographs of ths bismuth test meal In the course of digestion - throw much light upon ths various - causes of food stasis bringing out such unsuspected things as kinks In tho bowel, dilated stomach, sagging (ptosis) or tho stomach, adhesions, ulcer, and other abnormalities of structure. Small meals thoroughly masti cated. Cold water In. plenty at meal time, but no liquids to wash down food. Never oat unless really bun gry, no matter If It is dinner hour or tha cook needs encouragement or tho host compliments. Rest ball an hour after eating, preferably ly ing do.n. Then' unbend make monkey of yourself, roll on the floor, turn a few somersaults, stand os your head, kick your beels In the. air unllmber, ahaka down your food and rouse your circulation. Watch for tomorrow's article, "Th Treatment of Ooltre," the second of series of four Interesting Tslks spoil Ooltre, to bo published during the week. .noWJ r will sol fH-a4 v if, mi - CU 1 Ml HMVl' AUrttt a (Mrs to MrUt, I III
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
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Feb. 15, 1916, edition 1
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