Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Feb. 19, 1937, edition 1 / Page 5
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Mrs Knox Johnstone is enter-^ taining throughout the week at a series of bridge parries, both in the afternoon and at night. READ THE ADS At ¥enr latest! Frss Frcsn Csr.sispEticn Nothing beats a dean sys tem for health! At the first sign of consti pation, take Eiack-Draught for prompt relief. Many men and women have said Eiack-Draught brings such refresh ing relief. By Ds cleansing action, poisonous effects of constipation are driven out; you soon feel better, more efficient. Black-Draught costs less than most ether laxatives. PS EsS’W' A GOOD LAXr_ DR. N. C. LITTLE Optometrist i [■ ves examined and glasses fitted j Telephone 1571-W. 1 07 V2 S. Main Street Next to Ketchie Barber Shop STAR LAUNDRY "The Good One” Launderers and Dry Cleaner* Phone 24 114 West Bank St. ONE DAY SERVICE Candy Hall’s Cafe | 131 NORTH MAIN ST. "Good Place To Eat” Club Breakfast Blue Plate Lunches —-2Sc HOME-MADE BRUNSWICK STEW Pit Barbecue f Of Sandwiches nowAVV WHY PAY MORE? Courteous Service Always. 1 I i ( CROQUIGNOLE PERMANENTS $1.00 to $5.00 SPIRAL PERMANENTS $3.00 to $5.00 Arcade Beauty Shop W. Innes St. Phone 574 Used Car SALE 3 DAYS ONLY Prices Reduced ’29 Ford Coach $ clean. f ’27 Chevrolet . 5 30 Coach, lie... ’28 Ford $ 75 Sedan ’29 Buick $ 75 Sedan . ’28 Nash $ 651 Coach . ’29 Chevrolet $11S\ Coach, clean. ; ’29 Chevrolet $125 Coupe . Cleanest in town ’30 Chrysler 5 951 Coach . 5 USED TRUCKS Prices Reduced on all late models. McCANLESS motor CO. Salisbury and Kannapolis —. ■■■ —... —.nu*1. mm ■■'—I—- —| A Crown of Bran Biscuits , For Salmon Chowder I-- By Barbara B. Brcoks .. This salmon and vegetable chowder topped with golden brown bran biscuits is recommended for meatless days during the Lenten season. SALMON chowder pie solves the menu problem for many of the seemingly endless stream of meat less menus during the Lenten sea son. This is a dish that wins sud den and lasting approval, and your family will call for its "err'"?r*,''ree I time after time. The triple-tested 1 A. Salmon Chowder Pie 4 tablespoons Vs teaspoon pep chopped onion IV2 cups cooked 4 tablespoons fat diced potatoes 4 tablespoons flour 1 cup cooked si. 1 cup water (drained carrots from cooked 1 cup cooked pc. vegetables) 1 pound canned 2 cups milk salmon 1 teaspoon salt (flaked and bor>eu) 1 recipe all-bran biscuits Simmer onion in fat until tender. Add flour; stir to a smooth paste. Add vegetable water and milk; cook until thickened. Add salt, pepper, vegetables and salmon. Pour into greased casserole; cover with all bran biscuits or all-bran biscuit dough rolled to fit casserole. Bake in a moderately hot oven <425° F.) about 20 minutes or until biscuit dough is done. Yield; 8-10 servings. All-Bran Buttermilk Biscuit:: V2 cup all-bran Vz teaspoon soda cup butteimilk 1 teaspoon salt IV2 cups flour Vh cup shortening 1 teaspoon baking powder Soak all-brail in buttermilk. Sift our. baking powder, soda and salt gether. Cut in shortening until ixture is like coarse cornmeal. ud soaked all-bran; stir until ough follows fork around bowl, .'urn onto floured board; Jtnead lightly a few seconds; roll (jr pat to >/o inch thickness and cut with floured cutter, or roll in sheet to cover casserole and bak' - dy suggested. Yield: 12 Ijteewjfa. 5 diameter. NOTE: . ; .. sweet milk is used instead of but termilk, omit soda and increase bak ing powder to three teaspoons. -I THE FAMILY .DOCTOR JOHN JOSEPH GAINES, M.D SPEAKING OF TEETH |] I doubt if anyone ever fully appre- j dates his or her teeth quite so much i j is when they have just been all ex-1 ( racted by the dentist When the 'ictim struggles through the agoniz rvg days, tying to "break in" a set c >f artificial teeth, he remembers j vhat a treasure he has lost in his latural teeth; if it were to do over tgam, he’d treat those native molars 1 ml incisors with a great deal more if respect than he did when he had , ihem. The modern advice as to care of; .he teeth is plenty voluminous; the] ether-wave sizzles with the bray of I the charlatan. The hawker merci lessly besets you w ith his sugar coated nostrum, and wise columnists hand you theories, sophistries and "isms.” Those and many more. Why should I add my bit? Well, com mon sense at this time may not he amiss. There is no law on God's green earth that requires the obedience as to how often you should see your dentist, or how often a man or ohiid should apply a nostrum to any part of the mouth, gums, teeth or throat. Just the simple, well-known admon ition ; Be clean, alert against any harmful practice_and consult your dentist at the first symptom of rebel lion in the dental region. There is no minimu mor maximum on y our visits to the tooth doctor; go when you need his services, be it one, none, or twenty times a year. Continual and senseless scrubbing of the teeth is highly capable of do ing grave harm; many a case of py orrhea has been set up by the use of septic tooth brushes; the enamel of your teeth was not put there as a field for exploration by the swarm of nostrum-vendors that infest the land. Nature gave us about all we need in food-elements for keeping the teeth dean. Look for them and use them _and don’t believe everything you hear. Conductor: “Did you get home all right last night?" Passenger; “Of course, why do you ask?” He:"I suppose I’m only a little peb ble on the beach of your life?" She; "Yes, you might stand a j chance if you were a little boulder.” N REVIEW Ho hum! The millenial dawn ap iroaches, thanks to our medical olumnists. Every man his own die ician, his own self-culturist, his wn psychiarist. The family doctor > headed for the long vacation yhen he shall have talked himself | iut of a job for all lime to come, j Among my contemporaries I read hat tobacco does not shorten life; :hat the snifter of corn whiskey s not guilty, nine times out of ten. rhat meat and salt doo'c have a alame .nhig to do with one’s blood pressure--thi*. both are actually esentiai to h 'ting on all six. That health «.r?i>cs are often indulged up to a fatal point in many cases. That out, rest and sleep are to be taken j : ‘•r dictation of appetite. Whim t.-irks most of the medi cal theores »r*d specu'.i :ive hypo theses mto coiked hats—almost. Every man im, own doc:>r. He can go on hving, and die in his turn— so—he passas on. All i f wb'rh is so much piffle, written for the price, yet pregnant with horse-sense deductions. No two men or women are ex actly alike. Hence, there can be very few set rules governing the conduct of many. Here are some, however, that I may say I use my self: Be temperate IN ALL THINGS. No human ever uttered better ad vice than that. Temperance in eat ing, drinking, working, thinking, sleeping, laughing, sighing, living, dying temperate in 11 things. Ob serve that simple rule—and cut the doctor’s bill to near zero. Then, you will catch the "flu” or break your leg—or your wife will receive a visit from the stork —just any old thing will happen; then call the doctor; as you have always done. PLUGGERS ACCEPT JAPANESE PLAN Tokyo.—The American Associa tion of Cotton Yarn anl Cloth Ex porters has accepted the plan of the Japanese ministry of comerce fix ing quotas for exports to the United States of velveteens and corduroys, the figure for the first year being fixed at 1,250,000 square yards and for the second at 1,500,000 square yards. With a charming aid of romance and pleasant sentimentality, the com pany were discussing how each mar ried couple among them first met. •'And where did you first meet your wiife?” the little man in the corner was asked. ‘‘Gentlemen, I did not meet her,” ■She overtook me." ADVERTISE IN THIS NEWS PAPER FOR BEST RESULTS J. C. Byrd of 'Harnett County recently killed 23 hogs from which he secured 8,000 pounds of pork. Jones County rural young people have organized a recreational coun cil composed of recreational leaden from the different 4-H clubs oi the county. , In Lenoir County, 371 farmer: had the farm agent reclean 414.3 quarts of tobacco seed during January. J. F. Moore, demonstration far mer of Randolph County, kept an accurate record of all his farm operations last year and reports a return of 14 percent on his in vestment. MODERN WOMEN 1937 has already brought about many changes, not the iea<st signi ficant of which is Norway’s recogni tion of women by appointing for the first time one of our sex to the post cf director of the women’s prison m Oslo. s- => * The new director, Miss Olga Lar i-sen, has been for many years a teacher in a boarding school for dif ficult and neglected girls and princi pal of Toten School for girls. Prom the latter she sent out young per sons of who mSO percent made good in after life. •»»»>* Mexican women seem to be copy ing their northern sisters in a good many ways. Bicycling has become a fad in Mexico City where some women have actually appeared in breeches. They pedal to churcn where parking spaces are provided. And they have gone modem also to tne extent of getting jobs. The job, however, is relinquished when a girl becomes engaged to be married. The New York Museum of Sci ence and Industry recently installed unique model of a Danish hamlet built by Miss Mabel Jacobson, of Denmark. She is one of the most ex pert women model builders in the world. Her chief interest is in model ing boats and she has made more than fifty ship models of every type. * * On April 30th, the Phhilippines will decide whether women shall have the franchise. It will take 300,000 votes to give them equal suf ferage. Ballots were cast by 200,000 women for the ratification of the Constitution. !f * * Honorary membership in Beta Pi Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi has been conferred upon Dr. Martha Mc Cnesney Berry, seventy-year-old founder and director of the Berry Schools at Mount Benny, Georgia. She started the schools in 1902 in a iog cabin. The schools now have a 30,000-acre campus with 100 build ings. There are 1,000 students a year and mort than 12.000 alumnae. * * * It is the belief of Major Agnes McKernan. prison secretary for wo men attached to the Salvation Army in the Eastern states, that a girl should be given a chance to make good once more. She is enthusiastic on the parole. Through her the New Vork League of Business and Pro fessional Women has started a campaign to make its members bet kr acquainted with local reform in stitutions with the idea of lending a hand wrhen possible. * * * King Gustaf ofSweden has deco rated Greta Garbo, film actress, with the Gold Medal in Letters and Arts. UNION BUTTONS O. K. Detroit.—IHomer Martin, presi dent of the United Automobile Workers of America, said he had received a letter from William S. Knudsen, executive vice president of General Motors corporation, as serting there would be no obiection to union men’s wearing their but tons in General Motors factories. DEFOE’S SALARY CUT Callander, Ontario.—The salary of Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe as health officer for North Himsworth township has been reduced from $70 a year to $40, it was disclosed The township council made the cut retroactive on January 1, but gave no reason. MAY OFFER TEST CASE Gastonia—Attorney Wade H. Sanders launched a legal battle he said is destined to provide the first court test for »' important piece of social secur, ^ legislation—the railroad retiremeix act. He docket ed in Superior court suits brought by 26 members of a negro constru ction crew against the Piedmont and Northern railway protesting deductions made from their pay envelopes by the company. crrv tac nnn nAUjnre Asheville—Damages sought a; the result of a Christmas eve ex plosion and fire at a Broadway fire works store here amounted to $95, 000 Friday with the filing of an action in general county court in which Edna Melton Corn, admin istratrix of the estate of Francis T Corn, asks $40,000 from the Con solidated Realty company, A. P Mooneyham and Herbert E. John son. \TTORNEY DROPS DEAD Asheville — Emmett Thormar Wilson, 32, well-known Ashevilh attorney died suddenly of a heari attack at his office in the Lav building on college street, here re cently. He was asociated in a lav iirm with Claude L. Love. LANCIA, AUTO BUILDER, DIES Turin, Italy.—Vincenzo Lancia one of Italy’s leading automobik manufacturers, died sudden!] today. He was 56 year old, Lancia built up a large orga nization after starting his busines with a small amount of capital. Hi racing cars were well known on au tomobile tricks throughout th world. ■ BOSTON BROWN BREAD COMES BACK ! iv jO longer do cumbersome steaming kettles and that important el , ement, time, need to stand between the family and delicious home made Boston brown bread. The thrift Cooker of the modern electric range is the ideal steaming unit. Being a permanent concealed unit of the electric range, this Cooker is rdvmys ready to “steam up” a few loaves of brown bread. Little water is us'ed, little heat is required to keep the wate^ constantly boiling. No attention is necessary—just mix up the batter, place it in cans or molds, and forget about it until done. Biscuit-Sued^ Jacket NEW YORK . . . This waist length Jacket of biscuit colored woolen in suede-ifke finish is a popular Spring fashion number. It is worn with contrasting nary frock of wool crepe. Large flow ers of the Jacket material are ap pliqued on the shoulders of the frock. Flees "Sit-Down” Suitor | |;£-. - ■ ‘-i j NEW YORK . . Florence Hurl but, 23, of Excelsior Springs, Mo. I is the fair lady for whom the | "chained to a radiator, sit-down- j ' striking-Romeo-suitor" got many newspaper headlines. She's here, via plane, for radio appearance and it looks like cupid has gone to press-agenting. 31,000 TO GET VACATIONS Chicago—G. F. Swift, president of Swift & Co., said more than 31, 000 hourly-paid employes of the company nd associated companies would have one, two or three week vacations with pay this year. Ap roximately 19,000 workers who have two years or more of continu ous service will receive one week vacations. CHARGED WITH COUNTERFEITING Fayetteville — Claude Williams, 66, of Fayetteville, was bound over, to federal district court by United i States comm.ssicner D. G. Breece : on a charge of manufaetdring cou : n'.erf erring 50 iy*nt pieto. He was placed under $100 bond. RAISE "VEST POCKET SHEEP.” Berlin.—Germany, creater of vest pocket battleship, has turned her attention to "vest pocket sheep.’ ’ To augment the nation’s supply ’ of wool, small land-owners are be , jng encouraged by the government to raise Ane' - rabbits. ; Three 4-H efub members of Cumbberland County are growing : Yellow Danvers onions as a new club project for the county. Three Guesses, Fans i-asBfcs,. s- - mr k ,.. LAKE WORTH, Pla i . Thfee guesses, fans, who the above base ball celebrity may be. ... It is none other than “Nap” Lajote wintering here, who for 15 of the 20 years be was In the major league, batted over .200 and has his name In baseball's permanent ball of fame.__ H'Id In Suck mg SNOW HILL, M~d. . . . Mrs, Jeannette Trader, estranged wife of the late Clarence J. Trader, electric utility owner, is being held on an indictment charging murder. She claims her husband shot himself when she refuser reconciliation Checks COLDS and FEVER first day Headache, Liquid - Tablets 36 Salve - Nose minutes Drops Try “Rub-My-Tism”-World’s Best Linement i PERMANENT WAVES $1.00 to $8.00 CAROLINA BEAUTY SHOP 837 S. Main-Phone 9120 WHERE to go and WHAT to do when your radiator boils or leaks. We flush, clean, repair, and re bore all makes of radiators. We seil or trade new and second hand radiators. W e are most reliable —see ue before you buy. EAST SPENCER MOTOR ro. Phone 1198-J N. Long St EAST SPENCER THEATRE SALISBURY, N. C. Program Starting February 19, 1937 FRIDAY—SATURDAY A Round-Up of Action . . . Filmed at the Texas Centennial! Gene Autry in "THE BIG SHOW” with Smiley Burnette, Kay Hughes - . 1 Also Chapter Six ft "Vigilantes Are Coming” I Late Show Saturday Night t "Bulldog Drummond Escapes” I MONDAiY—TUESDAY Mighty in Warfare, Danger ous in Love ! ! ! !He pressed the white front ier westward to Kentucky! George O’Brien in "DANIEL BOONE” with Heather Angel, Ralph Forbes WEDNESDAY ! She Ran Her Father Like a Jumping Jack . ! Herbert Anne MARSHALL SHIRLEY in "MAKE WAY FOR A LADY” with Gertrude Michael Margot Grahatne THURSDAY ONLY ON THE STAGE: "FOLLIES OF THE DAY” 20—People—20 : On the Screen: "ONCE A DOCTOR” with f Jean Muir, Donald Wood WHIN YOU BUY THE * uames or cnance may De an ngnt in tnetr place — but why risk your money when you buy razor blades! Ask your dealer for Probak Jr —produced by the world’s largest manu facturer of razor blades. Here is known quality —a double-edge blade that gives you one excellent shave after another - and sells at 4 for jOel Ask vour dealer for 8 package 1 of Prob.u.. Jr bln'!'"- f.-H-,.. 1 JUNIOR BLADES A PRODUCT OR THE WORLD'S LAROIST RLADE MAKERS
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1937, edition 1
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