Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Feb. 19, 1937, edition 1 / Page 8
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Strength During MIDDLE LIFE Strength is extra-important for women going through the change of life. Then the body needs the very best nourish ment to fortify it against the changes that are taking place. In such cases, Cardui has proved helpful to many wom en. It increases the appetite and aids digestion, favoring more complete transformation of food into living tissue, re sulting in improved nutrition and building up and strength ening of the whole system. quick relief rob nsse OIL (Enarco) __line joints and sors ■tiff moacles. it’a amasing how fast the aches and palna due to cold weather, simple neuralgia, fatigue and exposure or sprains ■>> 60c All Druggists.^ Don’t waste 2 moment if you see your child scratching. Prompt action brings prompt relief. Scsllt Jphskl Soothes instantly. Kills!*., tiny mites that burrow , under the skin anti cans, the itching. Clean, quick, aa‘ cheap ar.ci sure. All tit.:, gists— 50i! protect their babies against germs and skin-infection by rubbing Mennen Antiseptic Oil all over the baby’s body—every day. This keeps the baby’s skin smoother, softer. lovelier and SAFEcf. So, mother, do as hospitals do, as doctors recom mend. Give your baby a safety rub with Mennen Antiseptic Oil daily thruout his diaper days. See your druggist. MENNEN Antiseptic OIL ("Tm SO ~\\ Y0U MAVENT USED j NERVOUS THA1 NERVINE I COULD I BOUGHT YOU SCREAM Do you feel tense and keyed up? Do the care of the home and children, the obligation of social or community life, the worry of finances, “get on your nerves”? "NERVES" May spell the differ nee be tween happiness and misery for you and your family. If you are Nervous Sleepless, Irritable, Restless, it nay be due to an overwrought nc.vous con dition. If so, you v ill find Dr. Miles Nervine a real help. Your Druggist has Dr. Miles Nervine both Liquid and Effer vescent Tablets. Why not get a bottle or package and start taking it today? Large bottle or package $1.00 Small bottle or package .25 - F f^NERACiRAPBS WASH DAY for the “Three Little Words" in a New York skyscraper. Yhe harmonizing trio heard on Phil Spit?lny’s “Hour of Charm" musical program Monday afternoons from 4:00 to 4:30 (E.S.T.) keep house to gether in a modern way. Mary Baum of Baltimore is shown hanging up a few “pretties” while Joan Brooks of Oklahoma City tends to her Job at.the washing machine and Frances Cook of Shreveport,. La., reaches for more ironing to be done. 'ii '~r- r •.. ii ir" i' wiiiisnwiiiiniiwiiiiiei i ii iim ' . 1 NO, IT'S NOT A HEADACHE— B. A. j>.„ Rolfe, famous maestro of the air waves, is figuring out a feminine twist for a spe- Kp cial musical arrangement on the “Heinz ^ Magazine of the Air," heard every Mon-^/> day, Wednesday and Friday over CBS. . __ ^ (=-• - . * *% Hall good men to the aid of their|? '.SCHOOL: Scenes like this are being enacted p at every college in the country. Photo shows p the up-and-coming Frosh crew from U. of p ^Washington pulling up the river. ' M TH F WINNER over Jack Dempsey |. in tnis particular bout is 300-pound £ Amanda Snow of Minneapolis, who visited the ex-champ while passing! through New York on her way to |i represent the state of Minnesota at & the President’s Birthday Ball in| Washington. - Smiling Bob Kenny,| also of Minneapolis, is hand.: Miss| Snow the decision. I BEER BOTTLES —The! popular new design of 1$ beer bottle, the “steinie.” is so convenient that you ||| can hold seven in onef|| hand if you are as expert™ as Frieda Schmidt, shown ■ here, champion foam car-3!^ rier* in New York’s Ger-B| man«sD*akina colony. Bss COUNTY OPTION PLAN ADOPTED BY ASSEMBLY Continued from Page One counties which do not vote for liquor stores the Turlington act li mit of one gallon for the use of bo nafide guests will continue in ef fect. A resident of a dry county, undei the option act, may legally pur chase one gallon of liquor in a wet county and take it to or through a fry county but it must not be apened while in transit. Purchase af one gallon outside the State and ts transportation into North Caro ina is permitted. itatutes provide any regulation for The liquor bill nor any existing vines or other beverages with from five to 21 per cent alcoholic con cent. One solon said he was in favor af liquor legislation which did three’ things, and thought he had covered rhe points in the county option act. They are: (1) a law which would command the respect of a large ma jority of the people with enough public support back of it to make enforcement reasonably efficient; (2), a law to promote temperance and discourage intemperance; and (3 ) a law to take the handling of liquor out of the hands of the crim inal element. READ THE ADS NINE MILLION ACRES BEING PURCHASED FOR RETIREMENT (Continued from page one) ' land in the United States. In some of the mountainous sec tions of America, the land is too hilly and steep for farming. Rain water, rushing down the sloping fields, washes the fertile topsoil down to the rivers. Nature arigi-, nally provided a protective cover-, | ing of forest on these lands. Th^1 loss of soil set in only after the! land had been cleared of trees. Other lands are too dry for; farming, particularly in certain parts of the western plains. The drought of 1934-3 5, and the great dust storms which accompanied it. brought ruin to thousands of fami lies who had settled on dry land. In addition, millions of acres of| land were damaged, because when i the natural grass cover was plowed i under, the earth became dry and! powdery and the wind could blow the topsoil away in clouds of dust. There are some types of land that never were fertile enough to produce crops. Yet families searching for farms on which to settle, have taken up suc'h tracts without knowing that the poor land would doom them to failure. MONTILLA CLARKE DIES SUDDENLY — Mr. Clarke made his home. The survivors include the widosv, four sons, Herbert Clarke of Dan ville, Charles Clarke of Baltimore j Edward Clarke of Pittsburg, and; Monk Clarke, Jr. of Danville; and; two daughters, Miss Julia Clarke, j a trained nurse of Baltimore, and! Miss Elizabeth Clarke of Danville. ! Engineer Clarke, whose age wasi placed at 73, was the senior engin- ! eer of the Southern, his senioror- j ity dating from Jan. 1, 1885. He! had made an enviable record. H$: was the first man assigned to run! the Cresent Limited and was at the! throttle when it made its last run. He was noted for bringing his trains in on time. i He was well known up and down the line and hi, death comes as a great shock. — ; He:“ You’ve been out with worse looking fellows than I am, haven’t you?’ She did not reply. ‘‘I said you've been out with worse looking fellows than I am, haven’t you?” ‘‘■I heard you the first time, I was trying to think.” ADVERTISE TN TFT* NEWS-! PAPER FOR BEST RESULTS ! i SEVEN 'HURT IN LABOR WAR San Francisco.—One man was stabbed in the back and six others injured in a bitter street clash here described by police as a battle be eween rival longshoremen’s groups as an aftermath to the recent 98 day maritime strike. Meantime, seaman in Los A'ngeles opened a new court attack on provisions of the Federal maritime safety act, threatening maritime peace. DURlHAM YOUTH SENTENCED Durham—John O’Neill, 19 year-old Durham youth, was sen tenced to serve 28 to 3 0 years in state prison for the Thanksgiving night slaying of Jake Capps, Cha pel Hill-Nelson road filling station operator in Superior court here Monday. How to EASE a COLD FOR /5t TWO SIMPLE RULES \TSTEAD of buying costly medi i.es to relieve the discomforts of a ild, try the way almost any doctor >u ask will approve as the modern ay — genuine BAYER ASPIRIN. now costs only I5«“ for a dozen blets, or two full dozen for a quarter. The way you use it is this: Two AYER tablets the moment you cl a cold coming on, taken with a .11 glass of water. Repeat, if neces :ry, according to directions in pack •c. If at the same time, throat is ire, gargle with three Bayer tablets H glass water for almost instant lief Bayer Aspirin acts to fight r and the aches and pains of a Re! f comes quickly. Ask your 1st for genuine BAYER ASPI l;> its full name — not the name na” alone ' -J • “■ C A . i-e-LI. DG£EN FOR 25o Virtually 1c a TabSet Reliable Heat WHEN you order our Coal you may be assured you have the most reliable fuel there is for ef ficient heating. We can make immediate delivery . . . Phones 798 and 799. SALISBURY ICE & FUEL QUESTIONS ANSWERED REGARDING COUNTY LIQ UOR CONTROL MEASURE (Continued fro*i page one) the board? A. By operation of a testing laboratory and hiring of experts to run it. Q. Can the State Board of Al coholic control regulate the num ber of stores opened to sell liquor in each county? A. The measure provides that s iquor store may be opened in the county seat and that opening of other stores must be approved by the State board. Q. What qualifications must a person have to serve on the State board? A. They must be men well known for their character and business success. No member may | have any interest in distilleries ot iquor companies. Q. How will the board membe s be selected? A. By appointment by the gov ernor. Q. How many persons will serve on the county board of alcoholic control? A. Three men selected in each county at joint meeting of the board of county commissioners, the county board of health and the county board of education. Q. What will happen to the members of the boards supervising liquor stores opened under the Pasquotank law? A. Their terms will expire on June 30, 1939. Q. What salaries will the mem bers of the county boards re ceive? A'. The body electing the mem-| bers shall establish the salaries j ■or the board members. It shall! be set to secure the best men avail- j able for t'he positions and shall not' be large enough to aitract persons] unsuited for the work. Q. What will be the hours of j operation of the liquor stOies? j A. From 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. daily | except Sunday, election days and j holdays, when the stores shali be j closed. Q. Will any money be set aside j from the profits of the store for] enforcement of the measure? A. Yes, not less than five per cent nor more than ten per cent of the total profits as determined by quarterly audits. The money will be used to hire one or more per sons to enforce the law. Q. Can any person buy liquor at the county stores? A. No minor or person convict ed of public drunkenness or of driving a car while intoxicated or convicted of a crime which the court finds was committed under the influence of liquor will be per mitted to make purchases. It al so will be against the law for an other person to buy liquor for per sons barred from making purchas es at the stores. Q. Can liquor be consumed at the stores? A. No. Q. Can liquor be carried into a dry county? A. Yes, one gallon or less, pro vided that it is not for sale and the cap or seal on the bottle is not broken. The law permits de liveries through dry counties to a liquor store in another county. Q. Can liquor stores advertise in newspapers, on billboards or on the radio? A. No Q. How will the State benefit financially from this measure? A. After thg bill has become a law, the Legislature plans to pass a measure taxing liquor sales. Moneys from this sale tax will go to the state government. COMMITTEE DENOUNCED High Point.—Resolutions ap proving President Roosevelt’s plan for the reorganization of the Su preme Court of the United States and denouncing the State budget committee for not taking more of the "necessities of life” off the', sales tax list were passed by a State- ■ wide meeting of the North Caro- ! lina Non-Partisan league here last Monday. SEABOARD PLAN ORDERED Norfolk, Va.—Federal Judge Lu ther B. Way, Monday ordered re ceivers of the Seaboard Air Line1 railway to draw up and submit to the court "a comprehensive plan”i for re-organization of the road’s financial affairs. DAFOE ILL IN HOSPITAL Toronto.—Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, physician to the Dionne quintup lets, is in Toronto General hospital with influenza, it was disclosed. Dr. Dafoe was taken ill last week at his hotel. , hi CAMELS AS k I WANT!" I; says **. | | SIG BUCHIMAYR, | skiing wizard J “SKIING TAKES GOOD DIGESTION,” this great skiing master {above) ex plains. "Camels definitely help my diges tion. And they don’t get on my nerves.” SOCIETY HOSTESS {right). Mrs. N. Grif fith Penniman III, says: "I’ve noticed Camels help digestion.” Make it Camels __ and enjoy a sense of ease. CAMELS COSTLIER TOBACCOS Let Better Lighting Give Better Vision!... Safeguard Life!... Make Success Easier!... Quick Vision is the price of living in this iliotorjzed, mechanical age . . . good vision is the price achievement wherever one’s work calls for elose 3i> plication of the eyes. Leading scientists now suspect poor lighting n*ay $® the source of many health penalties previously blame on other causes. S Every year thousands of pemn p killed because they OoulanH see quickly or clearly enough. Thousand* are painfully injured for the same reason. Authoritative estimates set on annual tolbpf $560,000,000 in fatalities, injuries and property damage result* ing from night accidents on streets and highways—aocidents which better light would have helped to prevent '.Ji To this v/e must add a tremendous S number c. iVta.’itics aid injuries in || homes, factories and el where—many m of which are also due to poor seeing Jl conditions. ■ ^'e probably spend close to a blllicn 3 dollars a year forace' I ants which could m have been prevented with better 3j seeing conditions. Other losses, too Many persons suffer from nervous headaches, extreme fatigue and diges tive disturbances due primarily to eyestra in. You, yourself, probably know of some school pupil who lagg d in his studies, because of faulty ee-uig, and had to repeat the worl; c a /hole grade. _ Iocience now tells us that the number of students who do this i3 very large. We also know from actual tests made in classrooms that when good lighting replaccsinadequateand imp roper light, the rate of failures decreases a great deal. In fact, the cost of improved lighting is very much less than the cost of having a student repeat a grade. ] Much valuable time is lost in factories and offices because personsworking in these places do not see well, or do not have enough light. Often valuable manufactured products are spoiled when they are made in poor light. Often, too, employees are discharged for mistakes that ate dne to the lack ] of proper seeing conditions. Many other tragedies, attributed to other 1 4 jgyKEiF One school child in fee has defective vine* When w* iciku that rood am etvfli* nation has increased drastically tl18 severity of taake for which our ey®8 were intended, it is not surprising tl181 eye defects are so common tod»T 3 among persona of all ages. For ft* ample, 2 out of every 10 school . children, 4 o».t of every 10 co: e^e j students and 6 out of ev ery 10 percdl18 : over forty hav e defective vision. \ The conservation of human recov rctf8 — eyesight, health, limb, life —go:^ t hand in hand with seeing. After al^ 5 • civil 'eati on is largely a world c£ see injll | And leading scientists now suspeAJ that poor lighting may be at the ro<*\l of mr.ny health penalties hitherlj^H^* attribnteu to other canoes. What can be done about it? J First—Let us make sure that our eyejj 31 rre right by having them examined 9 regular intervals by a competent eye* I sight specialist. This rule applies to) j young and old alike. : Second—We must learn the real factsj I about light and seeing, and apply them, I :o far as we can, in our homes, in I business, school and on streets and I highways . . . and so help our eyes. I t ’ ■ la ■ J THE LIGHT METER Vo will gladly help yea get adequate light is year home. Ask aa te measure yew lighting with Ike Light Meter. There h bo change or obligation. 1 Duke Power Co. I Old Mattresses! REBUILT like NEW | ONE DAY SERVICE | | Prices: $5.00, $7.50, $10.00, $12.50 | TAYLOR MATTRESS CO. | PHONE 6 \ Awnings Venetian Blinds
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1937, edition 1
8
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