Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Jan. 3, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE ROWAN RECORD, CHINA GROVE, N.,C. SOUR, ACID STOMACHS, GASES OR INDIGESTION Each "Pape's Diapepsin" digests 3000 grains food, ending all stomach misery in five minutes. Time it! In five minutes all stom ach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas, acid, or eructations of undigested food, ro dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It is the surest, quickest stomach rem edy in the whole world and besides it is harmless. Put an end to stomach trouble forever by getting a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minates how needless it is to suf fer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world. Adv. Made Gown in Seven Minutes. In these days of "off again, on again, gone again" discussion, with women writing to the newspapers and telling how they can bathe, dress, pow der and all the rest of it in so many (or so few) minutes, here comes a "mere man" who puts them all to shame. He is Richard Leslie of the American Bead company, and before an audience of the students and teachers of the New York evening school of industrial art he gave an artistic illustration of how to design a dress by draping it on the living model. With half a dozen yards of yellow silk and as many of crystal-beaded tulle Mr. Leslie made up a fashionable evening dress in about seven minutes. He could have iione it in less time, he said, but he wished to have his students follow his methods. New York Telegram. Tetterine fop Ring Worm and' Skin Disease. Varnvllle, S. C.'July 17, 1908. My wife uses your Tetterine for Ring worm, also uses It in her family for all kind of skin diseases, and she thinks it a good medicine. There is no substitute. L. R. Dowling. Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring Worm, Old" Itching Sores, Dandruff, Itch ing Piles, Corns, Chilblains and every form of Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetter ine 60c; Tetterine Soap 25c. At drug gists or by mail direct from The Shup trine Co., Savannah, Ga. With every mail order for Tetterine we give a box of Shuptrine's 10c Liver Pills free. Adv. Too Much to Ask. "Is this train on time?" asked the Impatient passenger. "My friend," replied the conductor, impressively, "With all we've got to think about in connection with con gress, the Supreme court and the in terstate commerce comimssion, you surely aren't going to ask us to burden our minds with a minor detail like that, are you?" Granulated Eyelifla, Sties, Inflamed Eyes relieved over night by Roman Eye Balsam. One trial proves its merit. Adv. No Delay. "Old Father Noah had the right idea. When he became convinced that pre paredness was the thing, he didn't stand around talking about it. He went to work." "True enough. But you must remem ber that old Father Noah didn't have to wait weary weeks and months while appropriation bills were being put through congress." Whenever Ton Need a General Tonic Take Grove's Ths Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen eral Tonic because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts oq the Liver, Drives ont Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. Wisdom. "An owl isn't j-eally the bird of wis dom. He merely looks wise and does nothing." "Well," replied Senator Sorghum, "under the circumstances, isn't that the wisest thing he could do?" THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try Itl Hair gets soft, fluffy and beautiful Get a 25 cent bottle of Danderine. If you care for heavy hair that glis tens with beauty and is radiant with life ; has an incomparable softness and . is fluffy and lustrous, try .Danderine. Just one application - doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it imme $ diately dissolves every particle of dandruff. You can not have nice heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not overcome it produces a feverishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots famish, loosen and .die ; then the hair falls out fast. Surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowltons Danderine from any drug store and just try it. Adv. When a Feller Needs a Friend. She Tell me about yohr early strug gles. He There's not much to tell. The more I struggled the more the old man laid it on. Boston Evening Transcript MOTriER, ATTENTION! Gold Ring for Baby Free. Get a 25c Bottle of Baby Ease from any drug stare, mail coupon as di rected and gold ring (guaranteed), proper size, mailed you. Baby Ease cures Bowel Complaints and Teething Troubles of Babies. Adv. Gentle Thrust. Miss Oldgirl I remember. when the girls married much younger than they do now. Miss Pert Yes, so grandma tells me. High Cost of Non-Slip Sidewalks. Knicker Why don't you put your ashes on your walk? Bocker With, the coal so expensive? An acre of land in Nova Scotia Is said to have produced 500 bushels of potatoes. The man who nas scruples against gambling is generally unlucky at cards. HE-WEEKS EVENTS Important News of the State, Nation, and World Told in a Few Lines for Your Convenience. ROUND AB0UTTHE WORLD A Condensed Record of Happenings of Interest From All Points of the World. Mexican JDne more appeal for modification of the protocol providing for the with drawal of American troops from Mex ico is made by General Carranza in a message delivered to Secretary Lane by Luis Cabrera, chairman of jthe Mex ican members of the joint commis sion. .Carranza's chief insistence in his latest utterance is that the American troops shall be withdrawn uncondi tionally. An El Paso dispatch says that 300 recruits for the regular American army have been quarantined in tents on the parade grounds at Fort Bliss because five of the recruits were found to be suffering with measles. A report has been received in El Paso, Texas, from sources known to be close to Villa saying that Villa's forces captured San Luis Potosi. No details are available. Domestic An Amarillo, Texas, dispatch says that reports concerning the Panhandle of Texas jack rabbit drives held in a united effort to reduce the cost of meat indicate that not less than ten thousand jack rabbits have been kill ed in the various drives. A Savannah, Ga., reports is to the effect that the December exports to tals ,were swelled to more than seven million dollars by the sailing of two vessels from that port with cargo val ued at approximately two million dol lars. At Minden, La., two negroes held as suspects in connection with the kill ing of John Nelson Reeves, nine miles north of that city, on Christmas eve, have confessed, implicating Henry Waller, a farmer and neighbor of Reeves, and John Long, a 20-year-old-youth. The jury in the case of eleven de fendants charged with the use of the mails to defraud in sales of wild horses in Coconino county, Arizona, re turned a verdict of guilty against eight defendants and founty two not guilty. One defendant was dismissed by the judge. David Caplan, last of the alleged dy namiters brought to trial for the de struction of the Los Angeles Times building in 1910, was sentenced to ten years in San Quentin penitentiary on a charge of manslaughter. President Wilson pasesd his sixtieth milestone on December 28. Southern Methodist members of the joint commission on union with the Methodist Episcopal church met in Baltimore for organization. Bishop Warren A. Candler of Atlanta was se lected as chairman, succeeding the late Bishop A. W. Wilson of Balti more. Four persons are known to have been killed near England, Ark., in a tornado which swept through portions of Lonoke and Jefferson counties. More than a score of others are re ported to have lost their lives at Keo, Tucker and other small towns in the path of the storm. The statement was made at the meeting of the American Genetic As sociation in New York that every woman should rear at least three chil dren. It was further stated that col lege women were shirking the respon tibility of motherhood, and that they were not only damaging their mental ity but their physical beauty and pro portion as well. Six men are under arrest at Salt Lake City, Utah, as a result of the finding of a bomb near the residence of Governor William Spry. A reward of $1,000 has been offered for a con viction in each case. Washington A joint session of the Mexican American commission will be held early in January, at which the Ameri cans will give the Mexicans their an swer, and on its nature depends the future course of the commissioners, who have been trying for four months to adjust questions at issue between the two countries. It is learned in Washington that Carranza has raised no insuperable barriers to an adjustment of the dif ference between the United States and Mexico. It is stated that one of the Condi tions to which Carranza objects to the protocol is that under which the terri tory evacuated by the American garri son would have to be filled by Mexi can troops. The League of Peace, in session in New York, opined that for the United States to join a world-wide peace league would in no way jeopardize the Monroe doctrine. Saving Sense of Humor. At its best estate the human mind is delicately poised. In this respect it does not differ from any other highly complex machine. And for this reason a comparatively light shock may disar range it and reduce its effectiveness. Any human trait, therefore, that serves to guard the mind from jolt and jar is a saving trait. Of such traits is the saving sense of humor. This trait may be racial or national, for we see it more highly developed in America and Great Britain than in Prussia and Turkey. But it appears to be nourished by good physical con dition, says a writer in the Minneapo lis Journal. A people stricken with world-weariness like that of India can not perceive the hidden smile in things, as can a hopeful people such as we. But even in a well-nourished land like America the man with the saving sense of humor is none too com mon. Not Quite Perfect. In this neighborhood there is one little boy who seems so well brought up and. altogether so desirable a. child Tentative approval having been giv en by President Wilson to plans for a bond issue to meet a part of the prospective deficit at the end of the next fiscal year, administration lead ers in congress are preparing to bring in their revenue bills as soon as possi ble after the holiday recess. A policy of absolute silence regard ing the peace negotiations for the war ring Europeans and Asiatics has been adopted by President Wilson and Sec retary Lansing. Resources of national banks of the United States, Comptroller Williams announced, have increased more than fpur billion dollars during the past two years. Farm loan banks will be located in Springfield, Mass.; Baltimore, Md.; Columbia, S. C; New Orleans, La.; Houston, Texas; St. Paul, Minn.; St. Louis, Mo.; Louisville, Ky.; Omaha, Neb.; Wichita, Kans.; Spokane, Wash., and Berkeley, Cal. It is expected that the government will have to supply most of the $9,000, 000 capital for the farm loan banks, but stock subscription books will be opened nevertheless. In spite of the wide gulf between the insistence of the central powers for an immediate peace conference and the forecast of a unanimous refusal by the entente allies to enter such a conference without knowing Germa ny's terms in advance, the American government believes that the negotia tions in progress are resulting in good. House leaders predict that the pro posed increase in postage rate on sec ond class matter never will be enact ed into law. Congressman Jeff McLemore of Tex as and Miss Fannie Clark were mar ried at the home of the bride in Gal veston. Foodstuffs continue to leave Amer ican ports in vast quantities. The official returns of the national election held in November show that Wilson received 9,116,296 votes and Hughes 8,457,474, a plurality for Wil son of 568,822. The total popular vote in the na tional elections in November was 18, 638,871, against 15,045,322 in 1912. This is an increase of 3,593,549, ac counted for by the increased popula tion and the women vote in the new suffrage states. Plans for a great naval demonstra tion to signalize American acquisition of the Danish West Indies, are being considered by state and navy depart ment officials. Probably the entire At lantic fleet will be ordered to St. Thom as, the long-sougiit naval base site, to participate. The battleship Delaware was ram med and a hole three feet in diam eter was stove in her stern above the water line by the naval tug Sonoma at the Norfolk, Va., navy yard. None was injured. A Havana, Cuba, dispatch says: "Raising a flag saying that they would be removed only by violence, 174 in mates of the San Lazaro hospital for lepers, who were to have been trans ferred, refused to leave the building. The officers of the institution were un willing to use force. However, the le pers agreed to leave San Lazaro hos pital for Mariel, on receiving the prom ise of health officials to remove them thence to a new hospital now under construction, as soon as it is finished." European War Pressing in upon southern Moldavia from three sides, apparently with all their vigor, the forces of the central powers are making progress against stiff resistance. On the Transylvanian Moldavian frontier, Berlin reports, the Austro-Germans and Bulgarian troops continue to advance. A new thrust has been started by the Austro-Germans along the Molda vian frontier, which adds to the dif ficulties of the Russians and Rouman ians, already hard pressed from the south and east. Along the river Kasino, and west of Covesha, Petrograd says, Roumanian troops were driven back nearly a mile. Field Marshal von Mackensen has reached Dumitresti, About 12 miles northeast of that town troops under his command have captured several villages.. The Greek government has address ed a second note to the entente pow ers, pointing out the growing popular resentment against their blockade. Considerable fighting is again taking place on the eVrdun sector around Le Mort Homme and on the eastern slopes of Hill 304. . Having taking Filipechti, thirty miles to the southwest, Field Marshal von Mackensen's troops have now cap tured the railroad town of Rimnik Sa rat, relatively the same distance to the east. A Berlin dispatch to President Wil son says that Germany and her allies Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Tur key replied to the note of President Wilson in which he asked the bel ligerent nations state the aims for which they were fighting. The pro posal is . made by the central powers that a conference of the delegates of all the belligerents be held immedi ately in a neutral city. The task of preventing future wars, can be begun only after the end of the present struggle, the statement says. that for a time we felt sure the neigh bor women wouldn't be tble to think of anything to say. but now we. under stand from a reliable source that it's a perfect shame that his parents are jeopardizing his whole future by not having his teeth straightened. Ohio State Journal. Call Not Needed. "How long is that orchestra going to play in the grillroom?" asked the nervous stranger in a large city. "For several more hours," replied the clerk. "Do you want to leave a call?" "A what?" "A call. Do you want us to wake you up?" "Great Scott ! No '. Give me some thing to put me to sleep." , Millennial Dream. A New York stenographer has set a new record by writing 137 words a minute. Some day a stenographer will not only be able to write that many words, but to spell them correctly and then the millennium will be at hand. Cleveland l'iain Dealer. TO ALL Fim BILLS MEMBERS RETURN FROM CHRIST MAS VACATION PREPARED FOR RUSH. WILLING TO WORK OVERTIME Railroad Legislation and Revenue De ficit Are Unusual Issues Arrry and Navy Supply Bills and Military Training Demand Attention. Washington. Members of Congress returned to Washington from their Chirstmas holiday, prepared to get down to hard work on the accumula tion of legislation that must be dealt wifh before adjournment on March 4. With railroad legislation and reve nue deficits confronting them as un usual issues, the rank and file deter mined to labor with a will to clear the way of routine business, particular ly the appropriation bills, which must be completed before the actual reve nue needs can be definitely establish ed. Estimates on all these measures, including especially the extra heavy army and navy supply bills, are in hand giving the House ways and means committee enough information upon which to frame revenue legislation at once. Appropriation measures will be considered in the Senate immediately, the Indian bill probably being the first taken up, while various commit tees are engaged in paving the way for consideration of railroad meas ures, a corrupt practices bill and other general legislation. The House, which already , has passed five appro priation bills, still has nine more to work out, and will approach that task vigorously with night sessions in pros pect for the near future. Returning members who were re elected do not look on the talk of an extra session and declare they are will ing to work night and day to avert one. They insist that ncne will be necessary unless aTction by Congress on the railroad legislation proposed by the president should be held up. Even in that event all are not satisfied that the president would call an extra ses sion for this purpose. THOUSANDS OF GUNS NOW BEING MADE BY TEUTONS. Every Available Skilled Mechanic Taken From Trenches Prepare Big Campaign. Berlin, via Sayville. Many thousand guns per week is reported to be. the measure of the mighty manufacturing effort which Germany is now making for the campaign of 1917 an effort upon which the entire manhood force of the nation which can be spared from the front and their regular oc cupation is being concenterated un der First Quartermaster von Luden dorf universal labor service law. Counting four months before the probable renewal of the world war in full vigor on all fronts, these fig ures mean a new immense supply of cannon of all calibers from field guns up to the gigantic howitzers, to meet the admittedly gigantic effort which the Entente Allies are expected to make in this the third year of Kitch ener's prophecy, to turn -. the scale of the war. Along with these guns the German j factories are turning out correspond ingly stupendous quantities of am munition and the production of ma chine guns, each of which virtually replaces a platoon of men, has been placed on a scale far beyond that of the past year. The campaign of 1917 will, it Is already evident, be fought as a wide extension and development of the Somme battle, with even a heavier conception of artillery over a far wider front and with lines literally bristling with machine guns. Con fidence that their opponents will be unable to break through this wall of steel and fire is not only expressed by the higher commanders, but also is manifested right down into the ranks of the common people. GEN, HAYES, ONE TIME N. C. GOVERNOR, DIES IN N. J. Verona, N. J. Gen. Edward Lewis Hayes, a cousin of President Ruther ford B. Hayes, and at one time Gover nor of North Carolina, died at his home here. He was 97 years old Fri day, December 28. At a celebration in honor of the event he insisted on cutting the birthday cake himself and seemed better than for some months. That night, however, he suffered an attack of indigestion and grew stead ily worse. General Hayes was a prominent Re publican and was a delegate to the convention which nominated Abraham Lincoln for the presidency. He serv ed throughout the Civil War, . enter ing the service as a major in the One Hundredth Ohio Volunteers. He was promoted to colonel of that regiment and later became a brigadier general. He took part in 30 battles, although he was a prisoner in Libby prison for 11 months. During the Reconstruc tion period he was Governor of North Carolina for about nine months. SENTIMENT OF CONGRESS AS TO PEACE TO BE TESTED- Washing-!!. President Wilson went to the Capitol and spent an hour discussing the country's foreign af fairs with Senator Stone, chairman of the Foreign Relations committee. Their talk covered a wide range, but it is understood, that much of the time was devoted to the eltuation growing out of the unfavorable En tente reply to the peace proposals of the Central Powers, hich the Presi dent had been studying. CONGRESS RUSH CQTTON LOSSES DUE (From the United States Department of Agriculture.) If there is to be any considerable lessening of the great loss which oc curs in the American cotton Industry from the time the seed cotton is sucked into the gin until the baled lint is delivered at the mill,-say specialists of the U. S. department of agricul ture, planters must come to realize that a large proportion of this loss falls on them either directly or in directly, and that they must co-operate actively to eliminate it. The loss so far as the fiber is concerned results chiefly from improper ginning which injures the lint, and the inadequate pressing and covering of the bale. By concerted action, it is pointed out, farmers should be able to secure bet ter methods of ginning and better handling of their cotton,' being en abled, as a result, , to market their crops to better advantage. The part which the mechanical treatment of the cotton plays in the salability of the lint is discussed in a new publication of the U. S. department of agricul ture, Farmers' Bulletin No. 764, "Cot ton Ginning Information for Fanners." LOAD OF COTTON READY FOR SHIPMENT. Cttton lint is injured under the metl.ods employed by many gins by a cutting of the fiber. This is due usually to a too rapid running of the machinery, often because of the pres sure of business at the gin. For best results, from the point of view of the planter, the maximum speed should be about 400 revolutions per minute for 10-inch gin screws. Twelve-inch saws, which have recently come into use, are recommended by the department spe cialists because agiven amount of ginning can be done with saws of this size when the machinery is operated more slowly than with 10-inch saws. With the saw shafts running at the same speed, on the other hand, a gin equipped with 12-inch saws will have 20 per cent advantage In capacity over the same gin equipped with 10-inch saws. Perhaps the greatest losses falling on American cotton under present con ditions are due to the careless prepar ation of the bales. As they come from the gin, the bales are unwieldy and poorly covered, which causes handling charges to be greater than is necessary WHAT SILO WILL DO Save the whole crop. Insure "June pasture" in win ter. Save labor and storage space. Double farm capacity for live stock. Prevent waste in feeding. Provide more economical dairy feed. Make better use of grain feed possible. Adapted from Louis iana University Press Bulletin. TICK ERADICATION IN SOUTH Mississippi Makes Next to Largest Number of Cattle Dippings in Any One Month. (From the United States Department of Agriculture. ) The next to the largest number of cattle dippings ever made for cattle tick in any one month in any state were carried out in Mississippi in Au gust of this year. In that time the people of Mississippi, who apparent ly are not delaying tick eradication until their recently-passed state dip ping law becomes compulsory on Jan uary 1, had provided 1,056 dipping vats, an increase of 35 over the num ber in operation in July, according to field reports received by the depart ment. In these vats there, were 705, 424 supervised dippings of cattle, or an increase of 15,000 over the dip pings carried out in July. SIRE OF GREAT IMPORTANCE Sheep Breeder Should Never, Under Any Circumstances, Use an In ferior Ram for Breeding. The most important thing connect ed with the work of the sheep breed ers is the selection of the rams from which to breed. Never, under any con sideration, breed from a scrub, a grade or an inferior ram ; for, in doing this, you do your flock and yourself an ir reparable injury Vegetables in Hot Bed. Grow vegetables out of season by constructing a cold frame and hotbed. If judiciously used the returns will be ten-fold the first season. Good Fences Are Needed. Good fenees are needed all over the farm, but especially should those around the garden be good. Vermin Work at Night. Lire a:nl mites do tlit-ir greatest in ftjry tn the fowls at night while on llie roust. TO IMPROPER GINNING and subjects the lint to wastage and damage. Primarily to reduce handling and freight charges, most of these bales are compressed at concentration points and are, in this way, reduced to practically one-half their former bulk. The bales are compressed very rapidly in these establishments, how ever, with the result that some bands are tied shorter than others and bear most of the strain. Many such bands break later, leaving the cotton ex posed in such a way that it becomes seriously damaged during its long journeys. Complaints in regard to the condition of cotton on arrival at its destinations are continually being re ceived from foreign countries, while the more carefully-baled and covered cotton from Egypt and India arrives at the same destinations In good con dition. Use Gin Compress. While little difference in efficiency between the screw, steam, and hy draulic gin presses for ordinary cot ton bales is found by the department specialists, they believe that wherever practicable the local ginaer should be induced by farmers to make use of the gin compress, which turns out a much more compact and better covered bale than the ordinary presses produce. More important still, the gin com pressed bales, it has been found, ar rive at their destinations in better con dition than do other compressed bales. These gin-compressed bales are of about the same bulk as bales which have been repressed in railroad presses and need not, therefore, under go this second pressing. As a result, the extra charges for freight, compres sion, and handling accruing to the common flat bale are eliminated. The possibilities for inducing ginners to in stall gin compresses will be greater where co-operative organizations exist and where the ginning compression of a sufficient number of bales can be controlled. In addition to discussing the faults of the present ginning system, the bul letin already mentioned describes in detail the machinery of the gins ordi narily in use. Copies of the bulletin may be had free upon application to the department of agriculture so long as the department's supply lasts. TICK THAT CARRIES DISEASE Always Best to Give Cattle Benefit of Doubt and Destroy All Kinds of Blood Suckers. All ticks do not transmit the para site which produces tick or splenetic fever. Only one species carries the disease, but it is easier to kill all blood suckers on cattle than to pick out the worst kind. Give the cattle the benefit of the doubt. WINTER TREATMENT OF COLT Give Him Roomy Box Stall for Stormy Weather and Yard or Paddock for Pleasant Days. Colts should be taught to stand tied in a standing stall, but should not be kept in them "day in and day out." Roomy box stalls for stormy days and nights, and the yard or paddock for pleasant days, is the proper treat ment of the colts and the idle horses. DISEASE CAUSING BIG LOSSES Government Will Spend $50,000 for Special Research Work in Con tagious Abortion. The United States government will spend $50,000 for special research work in contagious abortion. At present contagious abortion Is probably causing a greater loss to the live stock Interests than any other dis ease. FEEDS FOR EGG PRODUCTION Fowls Not Full of Life and Strength Cannot Make Best Use of Food Given Them. Weak hens, in fact those that are not full of life and strength, cannot make the best use of the food given them and, therefore, it is usually the case that food given such birds Is use less so far as profitable egg produc tion is concerned. Grain for Calves. Calves will soon begin to eat a little hay, and grain, like ground oats, should thereafter constitute part of the food ration. Pays to Feed Calves. If it pays to raise calves at all it pays to feed and care for them from the day they are born. Feed Calves Separately. Each calf should be fed separately, carefully regulating the amount of milk by the size of the calf. lJT? I Shoot at a Magazine with a Black Shell and count the Dases penetrated.' Do the same with any other shell. That's a decisive test of penetration, of velocity, and of pattern. BLACK SHELLS SmokcleM and Black Povrdcn For free shells for important tests do as follows: Send us your name and address and your ammunition dealer's. We will send you an order in your dealer for shells from his stock and booklet of directions. UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE CO. 2662 Trinity Building New York City Vengeance Will Be Mine. Old Aunt Libbie, who washes for about everybody in one uptown flat, is still limping a bit from a fall she had on the occasion of the first freeze of the season. She was head-toting a basket of clothes in the direction of Toledo street when her feet mingled with some ice on the sidewalk. Aunt Libbie and the basket did a Mrs. Ver non Castle gavotte. Slowly, painfully, but with the same old sunny philosophy, Aunt Libbie picked herself up, gathered her wrecked laundry into the basket and started away. Then she paused, looked around at the flfe that had caused her downfall, and said : "All right, old ice, never mind, July'll git you!" Indianapolis News. 10 CENT "CASCARETS" IF BILIOUS OR COSTIVE For Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Sluggish Liver and Bowels They e work while you sleep. Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indiges tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head aches come from a torpid liver and clogged bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with undi gested food, which sours and ferments like garbage in a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery indi gestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything that is horrible and nauseating. A Cascaret to-night will give your constipated bowels a thorough cleansing and straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep a 10-cent box from your druggist will keep you feel ing good for months. Adv. BOASTER NEVER GOOD MAN He Who Really Does Things Does Not Need to Call Others' Atten tion to Them. It is an old. familiar saying that he who excuses himself accuses himself. So is It with the man who would exalt himself by boasting. He, too, accuses himself. To boast is to feel the need of boast ing, remarks the Irish World. The strong, energetic, really successful man is too busy planning new achieve ments to stop to plume himself on past ones. Besides, he is not worrying about the opinion others hold of him. He knows thatvhe is doing well and that he can continue to do well. That is enough for him. He is quite content to let his work speak for itself. The boaster, on the contrary, by the very fact of his boasting, betrays a curious lack of self-confidence. His boasting amounts to a confession that he is surprised at himself for ever having done anything worth boasting about. The discerning recognize this and appraise the boaster accordingly. Also they know that even those whom his boasting might delude would be repelled by the egotism which the boasting indicates all too plainly. This means that he would find it hard to get along with others and would be that much more handicapped for any genuine achievement. If, then, you notice in yourself any tendencies to boastfulness, consider their significance. Always remember that the more you boast the less likely are you to accomplish things that are really worth while. Marital Repartee. He You're always wanting money. My hand's In my pocket all the time. She Yes, and It never comes out. The United States coast guard last year saved 1.507 lives. Why Wait Mr. Coffee Drinker, till heart, nerves, or stom ach "give way?" The sure, easy way to keep out of coffee troubles is to use the pure food-drink P0STUM Better quit coffee now, while you are feeling good, and try Postum, the popular American beverage. There's a Reason i 1
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Jan. 3, 1917, edition 1
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