BUD ,n> BUB__ BUD’S A HIGH HATTER By Ed Kressy |
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THE FAMILY
DOCTOR
JOHN JOSEPH GAINES.M.D.
A REVIEW
Within the last week I have had
quite a patronage in "blood pressure
cases.” In this particular interval, all
the subjects were ladies. I could not
help noticing similarity that was al
most uniform. All were women past
middle age—60 and beyond. All were
of stout build—170 pounds or over, in
weight. All except one—a Jewess—
were farm dwellers. All except the
Jewish lady were of fair complexion.
Most all were of German extraction,
liberal feeders. All except the city wo
man had reared large families of chil
dren. And all of them, without ex
ception, carried their high tension
without kidney disease.
It is very common these days to en
counter cases of high blood-pressure,
the kind that produces hemorrhage in
the brain, and, paralysis, if not sudden
life ending. Hence the subject is of
rather keen importance, both .o pa
tient and physician. First of all in the
treatment the cause must be sought
for.
My habit is, first, to test for kidney
disease, that being in many cases co
incident with high arterial tenson. If
not "kidney trouble,” what then?
Well—are the'arteries hardened? Or,
is there evidence of a chronic liver de
rangement? How about the spleen, the
largest of the ductless glands? Is there
any focus of infection by harmful
germs? What of the elimination by
bowel and kidneys? Is the colon func
tioning? The heart? The voluntary and
sympathetic nervous systems? Lastly,
the blood-condition as to viscosity, and
its power to properly feed the mus
cular system, which includes the heart
itself. Diet? Regulate it according to
need, not routine.
We are progressing—slowly, it may
be—and thoughtful patients certainly
aid the physician. That’s the "why”
of this letter.
ROWAN COUNTY
PUBLIC MARKET
Butter, pound_25c
Buttermilk, gallon _ 25c
Sweet milk, quart _ 12 1-2 and 15c
Cottage cheese, pint_ 10c
Cream, pint _ 25c
Eggs, dozen _ 25c
Fryers, alive, pound _ 25c
Hens, alive, pound _ 18c
Hens, dressed, pound _ 25c
“IF I got constipated,
NT0S * I would get dizzy
and have swimming
in my head. I would j
have very severe
headache. j
“For a while I |
thought I wouldn’t
take anything—may- §
be I could wear out
the headaches; but I I
found they were
wearing me out.
“I found Black
Draught would re
lieve this, so when I j
have the very first
symptoms, I take
Black-Draught and
now I don’t have the
headache.
“I am a firm be- j
liever in Black
Draught, and after
using it 20 or more g
years, I am satisfied
to continue its use.” |
—F. E. MeKinney, Orange
Park. Fla. mi |
f WOMEN who are run-down, or I
I suffer every month, should take I
I Caruui. Used for over 50 years. |
i
/
New Japanese Envoy
Joseph C. Grew, former Ambas
sador to Turkey and a member of
the American diplomatic corps
since 1904. has been named Am
bassador to Japan, succeeding W.
Cameron Forbes*
Cured hams, pound - 30c
Side meat, pound _ 18c
Sausage, pound _»— 20c
Shoulder, pound _ 18c
Pudding mush, pound _ 10c
Pudding meat, pound _ 15c
Corn meal, pound_3c
Dry beans, quart _ 10 and 15c
Butter beans, quart - 15c
Cabbage, pound _ 4c
Carrots, bunch _*_ 10c
Collards, bunch- 7 l-2c
Mustard greens, pound - 7 l-2c
Dry onions, pound _ 5 c
Irish potatoes, pound —.- 2 l-2c
Sweet potatoes, pound _ 2 l-2c
Spinach, pound _ 10c
Turnips, bunch _ 10c
Turnip greens, pound - 7 l-2c
Green onions, bunch - 10c
Peanuts, quart _ 5 c
Vinegar, gallon _ 30c
Field peas, quart _ 10c
Horse radish, pint _ 30c
Cotton _ 6 3-4
The way to get things done is to
have a good assistant.
If the little jobs are well done, there
are no big jobs.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as Administrators of the
estate of Mrs. Laura A. C. Josey^ this is to
notify all persons having claims against the
said decedent to file an itemized, verified
statement of same with the undersigned on or
before the 30th day of January, 1933, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of their re
covery. Persons indebted to said estate are
notified to make prompt settlement.
This Jan. 28, 1932.
C. L. RODGERS and G. T. BROWN,
Administrators of Mrs. Laura A. C. Josey.
J. M. WAGGONER, Atty.
Jn.29-Mch.4.
NOTICE OF RE-SALE OF REAL PROPERTY
Pursuant to an order of the Superior Court
of Rowan County made in the matter of the
sale of the Jas. C. Redwine and wife, Zel
ma Redwine property by Ira R. Swicegood,
trustee, the undersigned trustee will, on
THE 13th DAY OF FEBRUARY,
SATURDAY, 1932, at 12:00 NOON,
at the Courthouse Door in the City of Sal
isbury, N. C., sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash, the following describ
ed real property, to-wit:
Beginning at a stake, Redwine’s corner
on Hege’s line, thence with Redwine’s line
N. 87 deg. W. 924 feet to a stone, Red
wine’s corner; thence S. 4 deg. W. 200
feet to a stone in the road, Redwine’s
corner, thence N. 87 deg. W. 295 feet to
a stake, G. D. Redwine’s corner; thence
S. 16 deg. E. 1562 feet to a stone, Red
wine’s corner; thence S. 4 deg. W. 888
feet to a stone on George Overman’s line ;
thence with Overman’s line S. 87 deg. E.
400 feet to a stake on B. F. Whitaker’s
line; thence with Whitaker’s line N. 4
deg. W. 396 feet to a stake, Whitaker’s
corner; thence N. 17 deg. E. 155 feet to
a stake, Whitaker’s corner; thence N.
22 1-2 deg. E. 787 feet to a white oak,
Whitaker’s corner; thence N. 6 deg. E.
1188 feet to the beginning, containing
40 acres, more or less.
This sale is made subject to all out
standing taxes and bidding will commence
at $1155.00.
This the 27th day of Jan., 1932.
IRA R. SWIGEGOOD, Trustee.
• Jn.29-Fb.5.
NORTH CAROLINA,
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
ROWAN COUNTY.
Willie Hollar, Plaintiff,
vs
Earl C. Hollar, Defendant.
NOTICE
TO EARL C. HOLLAR. DEFENDANT:
You are hereby notified and you will take
notice herefrom that an action entitled as
above has been instituted against you in the
Superior Court of Rowan county in which your
■wife, Willie Hollar, seeks an absolute divorce
on the ground of adultery.
You will further take notice that unless you
appear before the undersigned Clerk of Su
perior Court of Rowan County at his office
in Salisbury, North Carolina, within thirty
days after the publication of the last notice
hereof as required by law, and answer or
demur to the complaint to be filed by the
plaintiff the plaintiff will be granted the re
lief demanded in her complaint.
Witness my hand and the seal of the Super
ior Court of Rowan County, North Carolina,
this the 28 day of January, 1932.
B. D. McCUBBINS,
CSC.
R. R. HAWFIELD, Attorney for Plaintiff.'
Jn.29-Mch.4.
Venus Hasn’t Cussed In His Life
And He’s Now Over 80 Years Old,
He Declares In Article To Watchman
Venus is over eighty years old and
never said a profane word in all his
life if you can beat it, trot out your
man.
Here is a letter we just received:
Mr. J. T. Wyatt: Inclosed find 2Sc
for which send me some of your Ec
zema salve. Yours respectfully yours,
W. C. Blalock, Oakboro, N. C., Rt. 1.
When twenty-five thousand fami
lies send J. T. Wyatt one dollar each
a lot of little children will be cured
of Eczema with his salve.
Send 2Sc to J. T. Wyatt and get
some Eczema salve and don’t let your
baby and little ones cry, scratch and
suffer when this will stop it as soon as
applied.
J. T. Wyatt will buy all your Con
federate money and pay more than
anybody.
Everybody here reads The Carolina
Watchman.
Venus got 2Sc today for some Ec
zema salve.
We are having some fine weather
here now.
If you want a printed pamphlet of
the life of J. T. Wyatt send a self
addressed, stamped envelope to J. T.
Wyatt, Salisbury, N. C., Rt. 3.
If you love your baby and little
ones send 2Sc and get some Eczema
salve and it will stop the itching and
crying and scratching as soon as it is
put on.
nere is a nice letter we received:
Mr. J. T. Wyatt, Dear Sir: Will
•write to let you know how my son
is getting along he had such a bad case
of Eczema. He had it for four years.
He had scales all over his legs as large
as a quarter of a dollar and his head
was a solid scab on top, but he is just
doing fine. It has all healed up and his
head looks nice and clean. He can eat,
sleep and work now. Very truly, Nan
nie Wood. Lexington, N. C.
The reason everybody has got so
much money is because the granite in
dustry is bringing it in from big cities
who buy their grante street curbing
here. Because we have the best granite
in the United States.^
We will send a fifty dollar bill con
federate money to anyone who wants
to buy it. J. T. Wyatt, Salisbury, N.
C., Rt. 3, Box 10.
BOY, 15, SHOOTS BEAR
Larkspur, Col. — Fifteen-year-old
Bud Tucker was hunting for porcu
pines when he suddenly was confront
ed by a large black bear. The young
hunter raised his gun, fired one shot,
and bruin toppled over dead, twenty
feet away.
DUCO PAINTING
Have your car painted at Bauk
nights.
Wrecked cars rebuilt
Windshield and door glass
Top and body repairing
BAUKNIGHT DUCO
WORKS
Phone 1416 129 S. Church St.
Portrait in Platinum
'ft M9g8»«gttg»»«^^
JEAN HARLOW
NOT the most unfortunate of
young ladies is Miss Jean Har
low, she of the platinum top, ster
ling silver^ersonality, and solid
gold movie contract. There is no
brass in Miss Harlow’s makeup.
Slim and dainty, she takes life with
a quiet zest, and begins each shin
ing day with a cup of fragrant
coffee, as shown in the above dia
gram. In the trunk space usually
reserved by traveling actresses for
spangles and sequins. Miss Harlow
packs aprons and house dresses,
and when she stops at hotels they
are apartment hotels with kitchens
where she can putter in the pan
try. She likes to cook, and it is
estimated there are 4,877,888 young
men who would like her to cook
for them. This is considered to be
impossible by Miss Harlow and her
mother and father, who travel with
her. She particularly likes to
make her own coffee because she
likes her own coffee.
“Why does a red-headed girl always
marry a quiet fellow?”
"She doesn’. He just gets like that.”
—W roe’s 'Writings.
SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
Pursuant to the provisions of a certain deed
of trust executed by C. H. Earnhardt and
.wife, Nannie L. Earnhardt, to B. A. Fisher,
trustee, dated May 15, 1926, and recorded in the
office of the Register of Deeds for Rowan
County in Book No. 88, page No. 75, and
whereas, said deed of trust together with the
note was assigned and transferred to Mrs.
Laura E. Cauble, on August 11, 1928, with
all of the rights, powers and privileges grant
ed therein so she might foreclose in her own
name, and whereas, there has been default
in the payment of the note therein secured,
the undersigned, Mrs. Laura E. Cauble, As
signee, will expose for sale at public auc
tion for cash, at the courthouse door in Sal
isbury, N. C., on
SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1932,
AT THE HOUR OF 12M,
the following described real estate:
Lying in Litaker Township, adjoining
the lands of Gus Basinger, Charles Ly
erly, C. H. Earnhardt and others, and
being about an half a mile from Faith,
between Faith and Salisbury, and bound
ed as follows:
Beginning at a stone in the Mt. Pleas
ant public road, a new corner, and runs
thence with said road, south 5 deg. East
4.60 chains to an iron stake in said road ;
thence north 89 deg. west 18.90 chains to
a stake in the branch, A. A. Basinger’s
corner; thence with the branch north 2
deg. west 5.80 chains to a stake, a new
corner; thence south 89 deg. east 11.70
chains to a stone in the field; thence
south 5 deg. east 1.20 chains to a stone
in a ditch ; thence south 89 deg. east 6.20
chains to the beginning, containing 10
acres, being a parft and portion of the
tract of land now owned by C. H. Earn
hardt.
For back title, reference is hereby made
to the following deeds on record in the
Register’s office for Rowan County, to
wit; Book No. 80, page No. 143 ; No. 167,
page No. 98; No. 172, page No. 33 ; The
tract mentioned above is a part and por
tion of the 55 acre tract mentioned and
described in the deed registered in Book
No. 172, page No. 33.
This January 30, 1932.
MRS. LAURA E. CAUBLE, Assignee.
Rendleman & Rendleman, Attorneys.
Fb.5-Mch.4.
We KNOW We Can
*
MATTRESS
FIX YOUR b“t' TO SUIT YOU
_ PILLOWS, ETC. _
YOU take no chances.
ALL work Unconditionally Guaranteed
TAYLOR MATTRESS CO.
South Main Street Phone 6
WHEN TO BE BLIND
A young mother who is a friend of
our family entered her daughter in a
girl’s school. She said to the head-mis
tress: "Mary is not much of a student.
She likes history and does fairly well in
French, but in arithmetic I think she
is almost a total loss.”
Amazement appeared on the face of
the head-mistress. "Do you mean to
tell me,” she exclaimed, "that you
have brought us a child who has ^
faults! After sitting here for years and
listening to mothers whose daughters
were paragons of virtue and intelli
gence, this is indeed a novel experi
ence!”
Most of us are constitutionally un
able to see any defect in those we love.
It might be better sometimes if we
could. Perhaps if we could analyze our
children cold-bloodedly we might be
able to bolster them with added
strength.
On the other hand, what a bless
ing it is that we do not always see too
well.
In cleaning out my desk one day I
ran across a photograph of our first
baby, taken when he was about six
weeks old. I remember how proudly
we sent it to all our relatives at Christ
mas time; how positive we were that
there had never been in all history so
Deautitui a child.
Today the picture gives me a fit. It
must be my youngster, for my wife -is
holding it. But instead of the beauti
ful cherub I remember, what is she
holding? Something that looks exactly
like a summer squash.
Without the blessed blindness of wo
men it is difficult to see how any mar
riage could be a sustained success. We
men know each other—that no one of
us is very good. Yet our wives have
the silly notion that we are great stuff.
And by their faith they keep us go
ing.
Centuries ago a city was attacked
by the armies of Syria. A prophet liv
ed in that city. A messenger rushed
to him in great alarm: "Alas, my mas
ter! how shall we do?”
To which the prophet replied calm
ly:
"Fear not; for they that be with us
are more than they that be with them”
. . . "And the eyes of the young man
were opened, and behold the mountain
was full of horses and chariots round
about Elisha.”
There are forces of goodness in peo
ple that are visible only to the eyes of
love. There are forces of power that
can be estimated only by the eyes of
faith.
The important thing is to be intel
ligently blind to the surface defects,
and to be able to see and appreciate
the things that can not be seen.
Mule, Bee, Electricity
Are Badly Scrambled
San Francisco—It was an "un
avoidable accident,” according to a
report of the State Department of
Public Relations, and here’s how it
happened:
A mule on which a man was riding
stepped on a nest of yellow jackets.
In the commotion that followed the
mule became entangled in a guy wire
which, in turn, pulled over a pole,
causing a power line to fall onto and •
electrocute the mule.
When the mule toppled over he fell
on the man, fracturing several of the
man’s ribs, and the man also wfas
burned on the leg by the electricity.
GROWS SUNFLOWERS
Portland, Ore.—Iowa’s tall corn
has nothing on Oregon’s sunflowers.
A bloom in Mrs. W. H. Morris’ flow
er garden grew to a heigh of 14 feet.
It measured 15 inches in width.
Shoes rebuilt the better way. All
kinds of harness, trunk and suitcase
repairing.
Fayssoux’s Place
Phone 433 113 E. Innes St.
A. E. F. Sweetheart Weds
Elsie Janis has wed Gilbert
Wilson, 16 years younger than
herself. She is 42. During the
War she was the most popular
entertainer with the American
doughboys.
FRENCH VANILLA
In France ice creams and ices of all
sorts are something of a luxury. In
America if not actually a necessity, ice
cream is assuredly a most common
place commodity. It has been brought
within easy reach of all.
Perhaps plentiful ice cream has its
advantages, but when any article of
food becomes commonplace it is some
how robbed of some of its appeal.
From the French point of view the
American portion of cream or ice is
much too large. It should not be re
garded as a mere food—mere nourish
ment. There should be only a morsel
of it eaten as a pleasing contrast to
more substantial viands. Ices and ice
creams in France are very often ;er/
ed in little plated-silver dishes—that
look exactly like very small porring
ers. There is one neat scoopful of the
ice or cream on the dish. "Glace va
nille”—vanilla ice cream—is most us
ually well made. Strawberry sherbet
is usual enough and sometimes a va
nilla ice—a very anemic sister to the
more tempting "glace vanille.”
If you are going to France and want
to bring home an unusual little souve
nir, get a set of those little metal
"glace” dishes—the dishes that look
like very little porringers. Then when
you have friends for dinner or lunch
eon and want to offer an unusual
touch to the serving of the sweet, you
can serve some sort of sherbet or ice
cream on these little French dishes.
SIMPLE MINCE MEAT
Mix one cup of chopped . ooked
meat, two cups of chopped apples, half
a cup each of chopped raisins, cur
rants, and molasses, one cup of cider,
one cup of grape juice, two teaspoons
of salt, one teaspoon each of cinnamon
and allspice, and half a teaspoon each
o^ clove and nutmeg. Heat to the boil
ing point, boil slowly 30 minutes and
pack in a stone jar until ready to use.
GRILLED PEARS
(To serve with meat). Peel and
halve pears and brush with melted but
ter. Bake in a moderate oven (375 de
grees F.) until tender. Sprinkle with
grated cheese and continue cooking
under the broiler until cheese is melt
ed and delicately browned.
COAL, ICE and WOOD
Lucky Strike Kentucky Coal, guar
anteed first quality ^
per ton delivered U • O U
"We Heap It Up and Run It Over”
Home Ice and Fuel Co.
BRYCE COAL YARD
Phone 1334 E. Kerr St.