Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Oct. 20, 1933, edition 1 / Page 3
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Hitler Startles World By Leaving League Says Germany Will Not Accept Second Class Arms Rights Berlin—Germany has boldly .a nnounced'_ her Withdrawal from the League of Nations and! ” the world disarmament conference. This she did because she refused to be a nation "second class rights,” Chancellor. Hitler declared, and wants equality and honor.” Hitler told the world the Ger man government and people are "animated by no other wish than to help end the human epoch of tragic .error, .regrettable quarjrel, j and fight.” In a dramatic speech, the chan cellor condemned the post-war Versailles treaty, long a thorn in Germany’s side, and1 maintained there "is no possibility of. terri torial conflicts between France and Germany.” He poured forth his nation’s hopes and grievances \ie spoke the country’s need Wor defense wea pons declared that "the men who today lead Germany have nothing in common with the paid traitors of November, 1918,” and main tained the German people regard themselves as guiltless for the world war. PATTERSON ITEMS : We had a community meeting at Patterson Grange here Saturday night which was well attended. A good program was rendered, music was furnished by the local string band. Circle No. 3-, of Thyatira Auxil iary held its regular monthly meeting on Saturday afternoon with Mrs. J. M. Ketchey. Pauline McCorkle, a student at the A. S. T. C. at Boone spent the week-end at home. We are sorry to hear that Jim mie, small son of Mr. Robt. Me-, Neely is very sick with diphtheria, j - Our community was saddened last Thursday morning by the' death cf Mr. Smith Shulenbarrier, who had been sick for some time.1 Funeral services were held from St.i Mark’s E. L. church by his pastor,' Rev. Trexler. A large crowd was at the corn shucking at Mr. J. F. Litakers, last Wednnesdav night. A fine picnic supper was served after they fin ished shucking. The men of the neighborhood helped Mr. John Shulenbarrier gather his corn Monday afternoon. Mr. Wilbur Davis and sister Helen spent the week-end in Boone. Mrs. C. M. Litaker is visiting h$r son, J. F. Litaker and was right sick last week. WOULD ALTER DRY LAW Mobile, Ala.—The Mobile coun ty grand jury urged Governor B. M. Miller to "take some action which will result in amendment of the present state prohibition law.” The grand jury’s recommendation were made in its report • that did not include indictments in num erous beer and liquor cases before it. Safe Planting Dates Boost Wheat Yield | Though the Hessian Fly causes! a heavy annual loss to wheat grow ers of North Carolina, some of the loss may be prevented by putting the seed wheat on fly-free dates. "These dates for the mountain area are between September 15 and October 5; for the piedmoont area, beteen October 1 and October 15, and for the coastal, plain' area, be-| tween October 15 and November 1,” says C. H. Brannon extension entomologist at State College. Brannon explains that this Hes-; sian Fly damages wheat by the: maggots or larvae feeding between the leaf and the stem. The plants are killed or seriously injured be- j cause of Jthis feeding and the yields are .therefore greatly reduced. The; small "flaxseed” noticed in the wheat plants are the resting stage orj pupae. The adult flies come from1 these sn-callcd "flaxseed”. The in-1 sect is very small, resembling the mosquito. j As a usual thing, the Hessian , Fly is injurious chiefly to wheat, though the pest will attack barley and rye. It does not injure oats. j Brannon says there is no sure control of the fly once it gets es-j tablished in a wheat field. The main control is keping it oyt. In addition to planting at th ; proper time, wheat growers may aid in control by following a crop ro tation plan; plowing under all in fested stubble as soon as possible af terter harvest and by destroying all volunteer wheat. Good seed, the use of fertilizer and cooperation in i planting on fly-free dates through-1 out the entire community will alsu help. ' In "Ike” Hoover’s Job Above is Kaymond Muir, newiy i appointed White House usher, who j will take over the duties of the late “Ike” Hoover, who died suddenly. TWO ELECTROCUTED Scranton, Pa.—When a pipe us ed to fill a silo rubbed against an electric cable, Robert Bridge and Oliver Slemendorf were electrocut ed. MEDICAL ADVICE If you want to .. . keep the bowel action regular and comfortable .. . make constipated spells as rare as colds .. . avoid danger of bowel strain —use a liquid laxative I Can constipation be overcome? “Yes!” say medical men. “Yesl” declare thousands who have fol lowed their advice and know. You are not apt to cure your constipation with salts, pills and tablets, or any habit-forming ca thartic. But you can overcome this condition just by gentle regulation with a suitable liquid laxative. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin has the average person’s bowels just as regular as clockwork in a Jew weeks’ time. Why Hospitals use a liquid laxative The dose of a liquid laxative can be measured. The action cap be con trolled. It forms no habit; you need not take a “double dose” a day or two later. Will not irritate kidneys. The right liquid laxative will bl’ng a perfect movement, with no dis comfort at the time, or afterward. The wrong cathartic may keep you constipated as long as you keep on using ill In buying any laxative, read the label. If it contains a doubtful drug, don’t take it. If you don’t know what is in it, don’t chance it. The contents of Dr. Caldwell’s Svrup Pepsin is stated plainly on the label; fresh herbs, pure pepsin, active senna. Its very taste tells you syrup pepsin is wholesome. A delightful taste, and delightful ac tion. Safe for expectant mothers, and children. Drugstores have it, ready for use, in big bottles. Above is shown how Uncle Sam is outfitting members of the Citizens Conservation Corps for work in the forestry camps this winter.' Left, the Northern camp worker with leather windbreaker, crowned winter cap with visor and ear tabs, and chopper mitten, with woolen ones inside. Right, a dressy olive drab sleeveless jerkin of melton cloth is the work apparel for workers in the less cold encampments. I ^-Of-The-Trail 1-* V-1 ; Machine-Gun Kelly, tries to laugh j it off, but those chains and leg irons know no humor and the *1 bad-man , j •of the middle-west comes to the end -of the trail. Uncle Sam got him and j plans on taking care of him in an efficient manner. SUNDAY DINNER SUGGESTIONS By ANN FAGR AN Indiar summer salad season | seem- to be in order as Iceberg! lettuce is mor , plentiful, of better quality and ch- aper than it has been . in six months A salad with plenty of ' good salad i-essing is enjoyed by most families -very day in the year. There is also plenty of excellent J celery at reasonable cost. Spinach is back in the markets in . abundance and the price is 'ow. Cauli I flower offers unusually good value ; even for October. Grapefruit is available in generous supply. Oranges are slightly more ex- I pensive than they have been and l lemon- and limes less so. Bose and ' Anjou pears are replacing Bartletts I and Tokay grapes the Concords. With pumpkin, squash and sweet potatoes all very plentiful, pies seem indicated. A very rich, smooth pump kin pie can be made with evaporated milk. ' Here are the menus from the Quaker Maid Kitchen Low Cost Dinner Meat Loa' Scalloped Potatoes Browned Parsnips E-cad and Butter Apple Betty Tea or Coffee Milk Medium Cost Dinner j Roast Lamb Browned Potatoes Buttered Cauliflower font Jelly K: i and Butnr Squash or Pumpkin Pie Coffee Milk Very Special Dinner Seafood Cocktail Chicken Fricassee Boiled Rice Green Beans Tomato Aspic Salad Dressing Rolis and Butter Snow Pudding Custard Sauce Coffee Miik Catawba county poultrymen are eating eggs preserved in water glass last spring when the products were selling for ten cents a dozen and are selling their fresh eggs at 28 cents a dozen. Flier at Fair , Mrs. Amy Mollison, English aviatrix, who, with her husband, Capt. James Mollison, recently flew from England to the United States, as she appeared at the Chicago World’s Fair. Health Demands Plenty Of Sleep Insist That Child Go To Bee Early; Warm Milk An Aid To Sleep By Mary G. McCormick Supervisor of Health Teaching New York State Department of Education A great many children fail to ge enough sleep and rest to aid then in overcoming the additional straii that study and long hours of con finement in the schoolroom impose. Lack of sufficient sleep ver; quickly tells in the school work. I a child’s sleep is insufficient he ma; prove to be dull and sleepy durinj the day, conditions which reflec upon his grades and also tend b destroy his health. Insist that your child go to bei at a reasonable hour each nigh! Up to 10 years old, the child shout be in bed at 7 o’clock in the winte and 8 o’clock in the summer. Mak sure the bedroom is well ventilatec the air fresh and cool. Open win dows both top and bottom for goo circulation of air. Protect hir from direct noise, light, conversa tion, and music when he goes t bed. Make sure he will be comfortabl —not disturbed by heat, cold, ovei ly heavy clothing, over-loaded storr ach, or the need to go to the toile With older children, guard again; their carrying their school worrie to bed with them; insist on th completion of the home study earl enough so their minds will be frs by bedtime. A warm bath before bedtime a great aid to sleep. Warmed mil , served just before bedtime helps child to relax and fall aslee promptly. The full amount of sleep needs by a child varies according to h age. Most parents do not appe; to realize that children need moi sleep than adults. At 7 to 8 yea; of age a child should have 12 hou: of sleep. From 9 to 10 years 1 should have 11 hours; at 12 to 1 years 10 hours; from 14 to 16 yea S' hours of sleep each night. This is the seventh of a series i articles on the health of school ch\ dren prepared for this paper. Mi McCormick will write about hon work and health in her next articl * TURN ON THE LIGHTS ' The price of eggs is highest dur ing the autumn and winter and for this reason the poultry keeper •jhould endeavor to get the • maxi mum egg production during this period. Observations have been made’that show that the food consumption during the early win ter months is; not as high as during the months, when the hours of day light are longer. > It has been definitely shown that I artificial illumination can be used t.o lengthen the days that are ab normally Jiort and that J -eater profits almost invaribly result when ; lights are used during that period of the yearwhen the ilfours of day light each day are less than twelve hours. The additional food con : sumption that can be obtained by this mar ’eemant enables the fowls to keep in better physical condition and body weight and therefore can lay re-re eggs during the winter ; months. By changing the seasonal I production of the fowls to get, this greater egg production, no less in the total egg production of the year re sults; in fact, is usually is in creased at least fve per cent. It has been usual to, say that it did not make any special differ ence when the light was given; morning, twilight or night; provid ed the day was lengthened and the lights arranged properly. Recent experimental work, however, has shown that lighting at both ends of the day to give a twelve to four teen hour day gives better results for pullets, than the other methods commonly used. In addition to the increased production, the morn ing and evening system has an ad vantage of owner convenience. . "The evening lunch” of an hour at night is economical in the use of light and is advocated where | there is a scarcity of electricity. It tends to break the time between ! the evening and1 morning feeds. It has the disadvantage of being less convenient and less effective than I the morning and evening lights I combined and requires more expen sive equipment. j The lighting of the layers 'n thi ! morning has been one of the mos popular methods. It -is effectvi i in promoting activity and increas ing egg production because th< birds are hungry at that time. Ii has the advantage that an alarn clock and a very inexpeniv^ tumb ler switch are all that are needed t; light up. The best results from the use ol lights may be expected if the fowl: are graded and housed according tc age, development and condition. Ii is poor management to give the same length of day and the same mash mixture to immature pullet: or those low in body weight as tc early pullets in good body weight The late-hatched pullets: need star cry foods to increase their 'weigh: and the heavier pullets should b< given more protein. It may no: be advisable to put the immature pullets under light as soon as the i early matured birds. The lattei i can often be prevented from goin* ' into the "pullet” or "autumn” , moult if their feeding time i: ’ lengthened and their body weigh ’ maintained. The first of Octobe: ; is early enought to bring pullet , on the lights. 1 FIND ANCIENT FCOAD j ROLLER Washington—What is believec to be a road roller has been dis - covered in northeastern Yucatan 1 It is a solid stone, thirteen fee 1 in diameter, fashioned in cylindri 3 cal form. Presumably, ifave taken in combat pushed such cylin s ders in building the network o raised constructed reads found i: „ the territory. '(DIZZINESS y e relieved by Black-Draught s “I decided to take Thedford’s k Black-Draught, as I had been hav a ing bilious spells,” writes Mr. P Charles E. Stevens, of Columbus, , Ind. “When I get bilious, I feel j sleepy and tired and do not. feel r like doing my work. It is hard to e tell how I feel, but I do not feel ■s good. I get awfully dizzy. I know •s then that I had better take some e thing. After . I found how good 3 Black-Draught is, that is what I 's have used. I guess it rids me of the bile, for I feel better — don’t >/ feel like I am dropping off to sleep 1 every time I sit down. That, tc 1 me, is a very bad feeling.” l" Now you can get Black-Draught t» e- the form of a SYRUP, for Childbih. Police Slayer Dies In Chair Chicago—First to pay the death penalty in Chicago’s new war on erime, Morris Cohen, slayer of a policeman, went to the electric chair in the Cook county jail. Two eleventh hour efforts to save him failed. William Scott Stewart, his atorney, first sought to have him adjudged insane. This 'would have forced 'any criminal court judge’whom a petition was presented to grant a stay of exe cution, but Cohen was pronounc ed sane% The iawyer also appealed to the State Board of Pardons and Pa roles and finally to Governor Horner for a reprieve shortly be fore midnight. All was unavail ing. Cohen, who was without a po lice record, was convicted and sentenced to death for the mur der of Policeman John Hastings in a pay roll holdup. BANDITS GET $3,600 New York—Two men who admitted they were very nervous bound a hysterical young woman cashier of the Flouse Decorating company, stuffed a $3,600 payroll into their pockets and escaped. For Good COAL Phone Acme Cash 123 Coal Co. ] M. L. JACKSON, Jr. Mgr." j! STAR* LAUNDRY "The Good One” Launderers and Drv Ckaners Phone 24 J14 West Bank St One Day Service Shoes rebuilt the better way. All kinds of harness, trunk and suitcase repairing. i FA YSSOUX’S PLACE j Phone 433 120 E. Inr.es St. E. CARR CHOATE DENTIST Office in Mocksville first three days of week; in Salisbury last three days of week, over Pur cell’s Drug Store, "On the Square.” ) CAMELS GIVE ADDED PLEASURE _ I ENJOY SMOHINoV SO MUCH MORE M SINCE I SWITCHED TO CAMELS m Mi in mm. WCAMELS SURE DO Y r HAVE A BETTER H I TASTE-AND THEY ■ I DON'T FRAY YOUR ■ I NERVES EVEN WHEN ■ I YOU GO IN FOR ONE 18 I CAMEL RIGHT AFTER || 1 THE OTHER f| CAMEL'S COSTLIER TOBACCOS never cjeFcu ijcmr Tier ue6...Tiever tire ucrur faste w they torture you by day? I NB'“!L ke«p »®U - awake at night? 1 teeps hospitals open and doctors l. makes your face wrinkled and Id ? NERVES ten it’s NERVES that make you haggard. j Do they malce you Cranky, Blue-give you Nervous Indi gestion, Nervous Headache? When nerves are over-taxed, you worry over trifles, find it hard to concentrate, can’t sit still. Nerve Strain brings on Headache. Nervous people often suffer from Indigestion. ' There may be absolutely nothing wrong with the organs of digestion, but the Nerves are not on the job to make the organs do their work properly. Do they interefere with your 9 k flj work; ruin your pleasure; drive MB®*® away your friends? You’re cheating yourself and the man who pays you if you work when your NERVES are not normal. You can’t have a good time when you are nervous. You can’t make or keep friends when you are keyed up and irritable ; You may excuse your self, but to others you are just a plain crank. CT'/ Ihidlndke JldJim; 1 piRIBBIf l mIK&IWK h if \/ ^ Jl Centrally located in . the heart of the Shop ping and Theatre dis trict and convenient to oil Government build ings ond Washington points of interests. 300 ROOMS / $?oo '“I*. One dollar extra for each additional guest Excellent cuisine in rest aurant. fireproof gar age- 24 hourservice r || /\V|H | nAKKIrisa I UN AMLLo President k-1 rj J U I DOUGLAS C. SHAFFER Manager
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1933, edition 1
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