Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / April 9, 1925, edition 1 / Page 2
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ME DEAD HDD SCORE INJURED DAMAGE AROUND FLORIDA CITY EBTIMATED AT OVER SIOO,OOO. Miami, Fla>—Three are dead and twenty-three injured are in Miami hos pital storm which struck the White Belt Dairy, about six miles west of Miami Damage at the dairy is esti mated at more than SIOO,OOO. Reports have been received at Miami that severe rain and hall storms were felt along the east coast of Flori da from Homestead, 30 miles south of Miami, to FL Lauderdale, 25 miles to the north of here. The storm apparently originated west of Miami about eight miles. It swept in a northeasterly direction and passed out to sea about 15 miles north of here. Hailstones as large as baseballs were reported along the southern fringe of the center of the storm along its path. Some of these were solid ice as clear as crystals of quartz. In the path of the storm, houses were unroofed and debris was carried to a height of several hundred feet. Arthur Pryor, bandmaster, who lives at Hialeah, west of Miami, near where the storm started, said that he saw roofs of houses raised 200 and 300 feet in the air. The noise from the storm was fear tome, he said, similar to hundreds of cannons being fired simultaneously. At the White Belt Dairy destruction appeared on every side. Ambulances hurried there and carried loads of In jured to Miami. Twenty-two injured are at the Jackson Memorial hospital and two others are at another hospital. Thousands of automobiles choked all roads to the scene of the greatest damage. A number of accidents and collisions were reported. An ambu lance was wrecked in downtown Mia mi when it skidded and went over the sldewslk. The dead: John Wssdln Simpson, > Westwood Park; Mrs. Mathilda Shnlts, 70. White BeU dairy; F. E. Sullivan, Westwood Inn. The Injured; Mrs. John Simpson, seriously, Westwood Park; Nadlne Simpson, t, serlouly, her daughter; Miss Lillian Matthews, seriously; LL man Need. White Belt Dairy; William Diaton; Mrs. Christine Ellis; Mrs. Blaache Easley; Mrs. Laura Bridler; Mrs. Ruth Reece; Miss Rose Edley; Miss Marie Weggeman, Lemon City; Charles Olive; O. J. Ellis; Stanley El lis; Henry Diamond; Sam E. Roberts; Ralph Vannetta; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Thornhill and infant daughter. Women Plan Large Building. New York.—A thousand baslnes* and professional women, members of the American Woman's association Inaugurated plans whereby they ex pect to build here a club building tor women which will be the largest in the world—a 19-story structure to cost 11,000,000 —built by women, financed by women, and run by women. Among the officers and directors of the association are Miss Anne Mor gan, Mr*. Newcomb Carlton, Mrs. W. K. Vanderbllt, Mrs. Daniel Guggen heim, Mr*. Isaac Gimbel and Mrs. Robert Low PierreponL The plans provide for a clubhouse containing 1,000 bedrooms, which will be rented to members for consider ably less than hotel rates. The building will be on property already aoqulred by the assocltion In West Twenty -third street near Seventh avenue Mlllerand Wins Seat In Senate. Paris.—Former President Mlllerand was elected senator for the depart ment of the Seine to succeed the late Senator Mangay M. Mlllerand receiv ed UO votes and M. Autrand, his chief opponen 175. M. Mlllerand. as soon as it definite ly Was known that he had been chosen as aaaator for the Seine, announced that he would become a member of the republican union group, of Which an other former president of the republic. M. Poincare, Is a member. The Tote received by M. Mlllerand wae almost triple that of the next can didate. There were 1.014 votee cast making MS, an absolute majority, the » firgure required for election on the ; tret ballot. M. Osmln, unified social ut, ran third to M. Mlllerand and M. ' Autrand with 111 votes. Osmln was followed by M. Bachlet. independent communist, with M votee. Mr. Came- Maat, the veteran communist who par I ticipated la the oaauaaalat outbreak . la Paris la 1171, waa givea 71 votea, I Jacques DaDar, 1; M. Dldelot. 1. One Dead; Another Hart. High Point.—;Boaeoa Hill ta dead | and Joaeph Byerly la la a critical con dition la a High potet hoepttal with a ballet wound la kh abdomea. The f polio* have Moodhoaads on th* trpli fe mt a aasro. Fk/yd Camwlags. balisved |to hare baaa Implicated la the *h>*l UnHjt told pollca that Hill aad the lasgro came to his house on the edge of Ej towa aad ha w*at with th«as to a ban itfhaat m yards from the realdeaoa |g« toll tto polio* fW Hjfti shot bta. WOMAN 18 KILLED IN AUTOMOBILE. Gastonia. —Mrs W. N. Davis, wife of a former sheriff of Gaston county and one of tip- most beloved women in the city, died from Internal in juries sustained in an automobile accident near Kings Mountain, when the automobile in which she was a passenger turned completely over, throwing he out. Two other passengers, Mr. and Mrs. George G. Glenn, are also injured, the for mer seriously. The other two occu pants of the car, Evan Glenn, the driver, and Miss Elizabeth Glenn, were uninjured. BUYS DOD6E B OTHERS GO. to. ■ • OWNERBHIP OF GREAT MOTOR COMPANY CHANGES HANDS AFTER SPIRITED STRUGGLE. New York—After a spirited strug gle between powerful financial inter ests, ownership of Dodge Brothers, Inc., one of the country's iarKest au tomobile companies, passed to Dll-| lon, Read and company, New Yorkj bankers, in a cash transaction lnvol- j vlng slighthiy less than $175,000,000, The exact purchase price was not j revealed by the bankers, but it was; learned authoratively that.it exceed-! Ed a combined cash and securities, offer of more than $150,000,000 sub-! mltted by the General Motors through 1 J. P. Morgan and company. Confirmation)of the transaction, re presenting the largest single transac tion of an industrial corporation for cash in the history of American fi nance, was made by Dillon, Read and company. In a brief statement, issued; simultaneously by members of the, firm in New York and by A. C. Sh warts, who closed the negotiations in DetrolL Within a short time the huge motor business founded by John and Horace Dodge a little more than 10 years ago will be transformed from a closed family corporation to one of the larg est publicly-owned automobile com panies In the United States. Reorgan ization of the company's capital struc ture is planned by the new banker owners, who will subsequently make 1 a public offering of securities, probab ly exceeding $100,000,000. E. G. Wllmer, head of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber company, who was! associated with Dillon, Read and com-1 pany representatives In negotiations for the Dodge properties, is expected , to become chairman of,the new com- : pany. Members of the banking firm as well as other interests Identified with the tire company also will be represented on the board of directors. Present executives of Dodge Brothers, i however, will continue In direct charge of its manufacturing operations. ■ Blast at Rum Plant Proves Fatal. Greenville, N. C.—ln Chlcod town ship there was an explosion in which four men, three whites and one negro were injured, two of them fatally. Raymond Cannon, Jim McLawhorn and Wesley Baker, white, and Fred Knight, negro. It Is reported were engaged In the manufacture of moon- , shine liquor when the boiler of their steam plant blew up, scattering the outfit to the tour winds. Cannon waa so badly Injured that he died Fred Knight, with a crushed skull, partial ly blown away face and many burns, cannot live. The explosion blew away part of the upper, thighs of Jim McLawthorn and drove a brickbat with terrific force against the forehead of Wesley Baker, who, other than a temporary ahock, is all rlghL Warns Againet Bunion Pads. Washington.—A warning against the use of bunion pads as a dressing ip vaccination against any disease was Issued by Surgeon General Cummings. He said the use of snch pads "appears to be more common than would be supposed." and that as a result several fatal cases of tetanus recently have occurred. Father and Daughter Killed. Florence, 8. C-—Dr. Plummer Al ford, of Maillns, a brother-in-law ofj Governor Thomas Q. McLeod. aad his two year-old daughter, were killed j whea their automobile was struck by| a Seaboard Air Line train near Dar llagtoa. Mrs. Alford was painfully bat art seriously lajured. The throe war* return lag to their home after at teadiag the funeral of lira. Alford's mother at Roch Hill. S. C. Trotsky In Flight With t Observers. Bert la.—Dispatches from Riga re ports that former War Miaieter Trot sky tea ted tram Suohum la the Cao casaa. where he was stsyiag for his health, together with the Commaststs Kata aad Nlkoleako, who had beaa stationed there to observe him. The Bovlet embassy hsrs charac terised the dispatches as "non-sense," adding: _ "Wo have just received a telegram reportlag that M. Trotsky's health Is greatly improved. WAD SECRETARY HAY QUIT POST ILLNESS MAY FORCE SECRETARY ♦' WEEKB TO RETIRE SOON Washington. Secretary Weeks has been suffering from an attack of thrombosis but specialists attending him announced after a thorough ex amination that his condition "was en tirely satisfactory." A partial paralysis of the left arm, which resulted from tfie Wood clot in the secretary's brain,, was said to have disappeared except below the el bow. and the patient was recovering use of his fingers. Other favorable symptoms noted by the mltlltary and civilian specialists who made the examination included a blod pressure close to normal. Mr. Weeks, who Is 65 years old, has been in poor health some time, and the physicians privately expressed sur prise over the rapid progress toward recovery. President Coolidge was Informed of the secretary's illness and is very hopeful that Mr. Weeks will be able to return to his desk in the war de partment within a few days. A for mal statement issued by Mr. Weeks' personal physician. Dr. B. L. Hardin, was the first public disclosure of the nature of his illness. Dr. Hardin ex pressed the opinion that in view of the rapid improvement shown in the last 48 hours, the secretary "should be out ia a short time" Flames Ravage Chair Factory Thomasville. The Thomasvllle Chair company came near having a serious conflagration at Plant C.. when a spark from the motor in the finishing room flew out into the va rious combustibles which filled the floors and space of the second floor of the building, and ignited. It is said that the flare was instan taneous and the rußh of flame and gaseous smoke throughout the room was both frightful and striding to the men, some of whim were able to reach doors of exit, while others ran to windows through which they leap ed to the ground. All the men engag ed in that department got out safely, but some of them were made very sick by the smoke and had to be car ried to their homes. With the appliances at hand the force was able to make only slight im pression upon the flames, but within five minutes the city Are company ar rived, and soon completely flooded the floor, which was fully The roof at one place was punctured by the flames, which were reaching far above the building. It Is said that nearly 1,000 chairs were practically destroyed, 300 of these being of the highest grade that Is made at the factory. Large quan tities of paints, varnishes and oils were also lost. Rob Kentucky Bank. Louisville, Ky—Four unmasked men entered the Porland bank, shot and slightly wounded Fred Clinton, the cashier, and escaped with $4,000 in cash and securities. Kilt White Rhinoceros. New York.—Mr. and Mrs. Phillip McFadden, of New York and Phila delphia, returned on the steamship Aqultanla from s four months' game hunt In East Africa, during which they bagged 164 trophies. Including s white rhinoceros. Students Draw Fines. Paris —Six students were arraigned frovilonece against the police during Bsturdsy's royalist republican rioting. One got 15 dsys in prison with s sus pended sentence, while others were fined 50 to 100 francs. Dr. Berthelmy. the suspended law dean who testified, sbsolved the students of all blame. , Wellssly Physician Dies. Wellesly. Mass. Dr. Katheriae Piatt Raymoad, resident physiciaa at Wellesly college since 1907, died here. She contraced diphtheria s month ago Dr. Raymoad was bora in Kentucky October 6, 18M, graduated from the Ualversity of ClnclaaaU la ISM, and received her doctor's degree from the j University of Michigan in I*ol. Held For Big Loss, j Los Angeles—Andrew PephaU. for mer official of the provincial govera meat of Ontario. Caasrfa, was held for removal by the Uailed States commis sioaer to staad trail st Toronto, on charges of embasslemeat alleged to la volve approximately SCOO.OQO. Poison Found In Caster Eggs of Liver pool youngsters have had a narrow es cape from Easter lUaees or worse. It was disclosed whea the authorities condemned mora thaa ».«•* candy Raster eggs shipped hare far ths hol iday bssiaass. According to officials as saalysls of the chocolate la ths eggs disclosed particles of qaartx, mlaate fragmeats of glass aad also traces of lesd. cop par aad stae aad a woody material rsssmbUag saw dast. THE ALAMANCE GLEANER, GRAHAM. N. C. TWO CHILDREN PERISH AS MOTHER STARTB FIRE. Norfolk, Va.—Two children were burned to death and the mother was seriously injured here Vben she tried to start a fire in a stove with kerosene.' The children. Elsie Trush, six years of age, and Jose phine Trush, 10 months, were asleep in a bed near the stove when the can of oil exploded and the burning liquid was thrown about the room. The mother, Mrs. S. Trush, was severely burned when she attempted to save the children. The Are was* extinguished after it had done considerable damage to the house. BOARD SELLS STEAMERS DOLLAR LINE BUYS SAN FRAN CISCO ORIENT SERVICE Washington—Over a protest of tbree commissioners and by a majori ty of one, the shipping board voted to sell its five ships in the San Francis co-Orient service to the Dollar Steam ship interests for $5,625,000. Chairman O'Connor and Commis sioners Lißner, Haney and Hill voted for the sale, while Vice Chairman Plummer and Commissioners Thomp son and Benson voted against it and Incorporated in the board's minutes a protest that the ships were being sold for $25,000,000 less than their original cost and $15,000,000 less than it would cost to build them at this time. The sale came as the climax to a long fight and a hearing punctuated with sensational charges. There were Intimations that the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, which has been operating the ships for the board as the California-Orient line and which had bid for their purchase, might take steps opposing consum mation of the deal and possibly bring the matter before Congress. the sale, which disposes of the camplete California-Orient Line service, the Pacific Mail would find itself restricted on the Pacific coast to Central American and Atlantic business, but it was indicated that it would not rest content to abandon the Orient field, in which It has serv ed continuously since 1867, without an effort to restore its service there. •' Statements of Pacific Mail represen tatives on this possibility, however, were withheld here while Gale H. Car ter, president of the company, also de clined to discuss the question in New York before he left for Washington to gc over the situation here. The vote on accepting the Dollar bid, which was made In the name of R. Stanley Dollar, vice president of the Dollar line, was preceded by a vote on a motion by Commissioner Benson to reject both the Dollar and Pacific Mail bids. This was seconded by Commissioner Thompson and was rejected 3 to 4. , National Guard Will Draw Pay. Washington. President Coolidge partially removed the ban he imposed last week in employment of deficiency appropriations not included in budget recommendations for payment of na tional guardsmen ior attendance at armory drills authorised by federal law. At the President's direction, Secre tary Weeks snd his military advisers took steps at once to make funds available for a total of 48 drills for each guard unit during thn current (fiscal year. The original war de partment plan, upset by rejection in the budget bureau of a request for a defticlency allowance of $1,332,000 to supplement the current appropriation of $10,200,000, called for 52 drills, on thn average. The President's sctlon was Uken after he had gone over with Mr. Weeks a carefully prepared estimate of «hat the denial of the entire defi ciency appropriation to the guard would meaa It disclosed that be cause of ths increase in j>ersonnel in the guard during the year and the greater interest in their work mani fested by unexpectedly large drill turn on ta in many states. It would not be possible for the guard units to do the minimum amount of armory drill re quired by law under the approved ap propriation. Mr. Coolidge therefore directed that such part of the defl cie ncy fund be made available as was needed to permit nil guard unita to at taln this required drill status mini mum and Insure continued federal recognition aad support, but that no more be expended. The law involved requires a miaimum of 41 drills hat authorises a maximum of M daring each year. MjOOO Aeree Devoted to Cotton. Chester, S. C—The office of agrlosl tnral stallstlclaa of South Carolina announces that SMM acres were de voted to the ralslag of cotton faring 1914. The average yield per acre be ing 172 pouads. which plaoed Chester coonty ahead of Its aolghborihg coun ties of Laacaater. Union. Fairfield aad York la this respect The stariatlca show that Cheater conaty's yield of 21.70* bales, figured oa the boats of the price for December, last, amouat ed to $1411.(27. J FOREST HRES SWEEP n FLAMES BROUGHT UNDER CON TROL AFTER 2300 ACRES BURNED * Ashevllle.N. C.—More than 2,500 acres of forest land in the Bent Creek section of the Pisgah national forest preserve were burned over. The fire was brought under control shortly after dark when additional volunteers arrived on the scene to ay slat the government rangers. It will be several days before the actual damage can be computed, it was announced, but it will total many thousands of dollars. It is the larg est fire In the history of western North Carolina since the disastrous fire on Mount Mitchell in 1916. For a time the fire threatened to reach Camp Powhattan, T.' M. C. A and Boy Scout summer camp. Land a all around the camp was burned over but the fire fighters were able to check the flames before they reached the buildings. Nearly a hundred men worked fran tically all day in checking the fire. Slowing up of the winds helped the volunteers In their task. This is the second big fire In the Bent Creek section of the forest in the past month, and forest officials declare that both were maliciously set by maurauders hunting deer on the camp preserve. The fire broke out in seven different places, which indicates incendiary origin, according to the forest patrol. Indict Seven Revenue Agents New York. —Federal grand jury in dictments were returned against- sev en deputy collectors cf internal reve nue on charges of extorted "hush" money from business men of West chester and Bronx counties. The specific charge was that the deputies solicited and accepted bribes form citizens under threat of obtain ing against their firm's income tax assessments, fines and criminal pros ecution. The indictments named Charles H. Green, Albert O. Nellson, William Snowder, Paul C. Stalnhaul, Henry Mayer, David Benjamin and Charles Tremonin. Agricultural Building Destroyed Clemson College, S. C. —The main agricultural building at Clemson Col lege was destroyed by fire. The fire started at about 3 o'clock and the ag ricultural hall was a complete loss, es timated at between $200,000 and $250,000 this loss including the equip ment, laboratories, several libraries and research records. The exact cause of the fire is not known, though it is supposed to have strated from a short circuit in certain electrical equipment in the left wing of the building. All students of the college worked to put out the flames, but their efforts were not sufficient to overcome the headway made by the conflagration. The fire was extinguished at about 6 o'clock. No other buildings on the college campus were damaged. The burned building was erected several years ago at a cost of $50,000. Fire Destroys Fifty Automobiles. Charlotte, N. C. —Fifty used automo biles were destroyed in a fire which burned the Rust Motor company's warehouse on the Dowd road to the ground. The loss of contents was placed at SIO,OOO by J. S. Rust, and it was said that there was SB,OOO of In surance. The building, owned by the Sanitary Enginereing company, was bnilt for the war department and was a part of the Camp Greene property. It stood Just across the railroad from the Southern Auto and Wagon com pany and had been used as a remount station during the war. The agent tor the owner of the building was out of town. The building, which occupies a ground space of 1(0 by 300 feet, was in a light blase when firemen arrived la response to an alarm teleprone. Named Rail Treasurer. New York.—Harry G. Snelllng. ae aistant general treasurer of the New York Central lines, waa appointed gen eral" treasurer of the system to fill the vacancy created March i by the death of Milton 8. Barger. Rash N. Harry, of Ciadnnntl. 0., treasurer of the Big Four railway system since ISO*, waa appointed to succeed Mr. Snlelliag. and A. P. Burke, of Cincinnati, was given the Big Four treasury ship. Filer Dlm as Airplane Falls. Psnsacola. Fla Lieutenant Guy B. Hall, U. S. marine corps, waa instant, ly killed wkea a de Havliaad plane la which he was flylag fall from aa alti tude of 100 feat oa Corry Said, three ■lies north of the city. Aviation Ma chinist Mat* Msagim waa injured la the craah bat will recover. The cause of the craah la aakaowa. Aa iavaetlgatlea is being ooaducted. Ueuteaaat Hall waa statfoaad at tfcs naval air station hern. ii DOINGS IN THE ;i ii TAR HEEL STATE i » . _ | ! I NEWB OF NORTH CAROLINA ! » I I TOLD IN SHORT PARA- » ! | GRAPHS FOR BUSY PEOPLB ! Durham.—'More than 2,000 North Carolina high school seniors will be urged to enter college next fall by R E. Thlgpen, alumni secretary of Duke University, wht> is now on a tour that will carry him to almost every county in the state. Greensboro. —Earl Thallklll, thir teen-year-old boy, of this city, was in stantly killed in the Southern Rail way yards here when he was struck by a switch engine. Wadesboro.*—The foundation is be ing prepared for the erection on Routherford street of a modern thea tre building. The building is being erected by the Ansonia Amusement Company, a local organisation of busi ness man, J. S. Webb being the presi dent. Durham. —Herman Jernigan, for sev eral years principal of the East Dur ham school, was found guilty in Re corder's court here, of assault and bat tery, as a result of a whipping admin istered to Theodore Lewis, one of the pupils of the school. Gastonlas —Mrs. W. N. Davis, wife of a former sheriff of Gaston county, and one of the most beloved women In the city died from internal Injuries sustained in an automobile accident near Kings Mountain when the auto mobile in which she was a passenger turned completely over, throwing her cut. Southern Pines.—Mrs. Anna P. Mllll ken, of Garden City, N. Y., was killed by a Seaboard train here. She was a guest at the Park View hotel and had gone to the station to mail a letter. Her hearing was not good and while waiting for the train to come in from the South she did not hear the ap proach of the one due at about the same time fromf the north on the parallel track, Kinston. —The American Association for the Study of Feeblemindedness, comprised of this country and Canada, will hold Its annual convention in the Sir Walter Hotel at Raleigh May 8 to 12, according to an announcement by Dr. Banks McNairy, of Kinston, a for mer president of the body. . Raleighr—Many North Carolina wo men are planning to attend the annual convention of the League of Women Voters, which will be held in Rich mond, Va„ this month. Women of this state will also have prominent places on the program. This will be the first national convention of this character ever to be held in the south. Winston-Salem. —Allen Pope, aged twenty years, is in a serious condition at a local hospital as a result of in juries received when an airplane in which he was riding fell to the ground from a distance of about one hundred feet. He Is reported to have suffered a broken leg, fractured skull broken jaw. Charlotte. —Postmaster J. D. Al bright's prediction that Charlotte's postal business this year will pass the three-quarter million mark Is backed up by the March total of $60,- 120.69. This makes the total for the first quarter of this year $178,738.72, against $158,479.22 for the same period last year. Hickory.—Prises anymnting to SIOO are being offered by the Brookford Mills Company to its employees tor the best kept and most sanitary press- Ises in the village this summer. For Beveral years past the company has been offering SSO In prixes on the same basis but owing to the unusual amount of interest shown last year, It was de cided to double the amount this year. Wilmington. Asserting that he fears a commutation of the death sen tence imposed by him on C. W. Stewart and his son, Elmer, for the murder of Sergeant Leon George and Marshal Sam Lily last Jnly would "work s re-assurance to the criminal classes, and might add to the grow ing conviction that no man can be punished for his crimes if he is able to pay," Judge H. A. Grady has written Governor A. W. McLean, strongly op posing any executive clemency to ward the defendants. Mount Airy.— Jeff Hawks, an aged vender of blockade liqnor, was again caught with the goods while out under 91,000 bond, having been allowed his freedom at the February term of Sur. ry Superior court, owing to a death in his family and bond given for his appearance at the April term of court when sentence would be pronounced upon him. He pleaded guilty before Judge Schenck in February after ap pealing to Dobeon court from the i~-i Recorder's court, where he receive s road sentence. Winston-Salem. Captain R R. Crawford, distinguished Confederate veteran and pne of Winston-Salem's oldest and most highly respected citl seas, died at a local hospital follSwlng declining health for the last few moatha. He was U years old. ffUer City— Mrs. John Cheek was severely braised np When an automo bile la which she was riding was ■* *mr miles northwest of this place. Mrs. Cheek was one of n party that had beea to Wins ton Salem to attend ✓ n missionary conference, sad they were retaralng home h a >T * »esssnger aatomohOe. Get Back Your Health! Arc you dragging around day after day with a duJl backache? Are yon tired and lame morning*—subject to headache*, dizzy cpella and aharp, (tab bing pains? Then there'* rarely some thing wrong. Probably it'* kidney weaknea*! Don't wait for more aerioo* kidney trouble. Get back your health and keep it. For quick relief get Doan't Pitta, a stimulant diuretic to the kidney*. They hare helped thou sand* and should help yon. Ask your neighbor 1 A North Carolina Case H. C. Kabe*. Box . 170. Spray, N. C.. L.-S r+.tm* • ary a: "I Buffered from an attack of backache. caused ■Vlfflfßnw by the disordered condition of my kidney*. I wai Srfik much distressed by M KH the sharp palnaß|taMf n through my back. IKUIML 2 had headaches, too, and my k 1 d n e y *BtH3]B£-JH didn't act right at - all, being sluggish. I used Doan's Pills and a.couple boxes cured me of the attack." DOAN'S^" STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Fo*t*r-Milboni Co., llfg. Chen., Buflmlo, N. Y. - Grandmother Knew Therm Woe Nothing So Good for " Congestion and Cold* at Mustard Bat the old-fashioned mustard plaster burned and blistered while it acted. Get the relief and help that mustard plaster* gaye, without the plaster and without the blister. Musterole does it. It is a dean, white ointment, made with oil of mus tard. It is scientifically prepared, so that it works wonders. Gently massage Musterole in with the finger-tips. See how quickly it brings re lief—how speedily the pain disappears. Try Musterole for sore throat, bron chitis, tonsillitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it may prevent pneumonia). To Mother*i Musterole is also m*d* In milder form for babies and ' small children. Ask for Children's Musterole. 35c and 65c, jars and tubes; hoe- Better than 3 rmutard platter What She Had Heard Teacher—ls the earth round or square, Juary? Mary—Neither. It's crooked. Cuticura Comforts Baby's Bkln When red, rough and itching, by hot baths of Cuticura Soap and touches of Cuticura Ointment. Also make use now and then of that exquisitely scent ed dusting powder, Cuticura Talcum, one of the Indispensable Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Advertisement. A Canadian Pacific liner is equipped with an "orchestra repeater," which enables travelers to hear music in all parts of the ship. j CHILD'S BEST LAXATIVE § { IS CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP j MOTHER 1 Even If cross, feverish, bilious, constipated or full of cold, chil dren love the pleasant taste of "Cali fornia Fig Syrup." A teaspoonful nev er falls to .clean the liver and bowels. Ask your druggist for genuine "Cali fornia Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother 1 You must say "California" or you may get an Imitation fig syrup. Lift Off-No Pain! J Po —ft hart one Mtt Drop a um « JTreewoe" 00 u cor*, lnatant v that corn stop* hurting, then short ly foo lift it right off with fingers. Tij^-oone"far a trntcretim-mnm i. "■neve every hard con, soft eon, or ** >, ?? > the toot "™* WIU * ,W «r Irritation.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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April 9, 1925, edition 1
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