Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / July 1, 1926, edition 1 / Page 3
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July i, i::s THE VOICE OF THE LIBERTY BELL I ""- ■' ■ •• **-«■ .1 I ’ P ; ~ V £ •' £ . £v £8 m m If 1: m iteliilSS y^Slfe. This is one o? tho two new official posters o? the Sesqui-Center.nial Inter national Exposition, opening in Philadelphia'June 1 to celebrate 130 years of American Independence. The Exposition will ccrdnue to December L Dan Smith, the artist, has symbolized the epoch in h ory which tlie tolling of the Liberty Bell in Independence Hall, Ju 4, ' h marked and has depicted tlie growi h of the United States from >3 < lal thirteen states, represented by the thirteen stars which eme j fi the mouth of Uip Liberty Bell. BABY'S COLDS I are soon “nipped in the bud" without “dosing” by use of— V M A §g& O 1# 9 ▼ Vapoßub Over 21 Million Jars Used Yearly c WEAR METAL PLATES IN YOUR SHOES AND BE RELIEVED OF RHEUMATISM, PARALYSIS, KIDNEY TROUBLE AND HIGH [BLOOD PRESSURE— , I, Paul M. White, was born and reared at Roseboro, N. C., was par alyzed in October, 1921, on my left hand and foot until about six weeks ago. I ran across a man selling those metal plates. I bought a set, put them in on Friday. The following Sunday I was able to raise my hand to my head and take off my hat, which I had not been able to do for the past five years. I have secured the selling agency in this State. Cut a piece of paper to fit on the inside of the heel of your shoe, and mail it with check or money order for $5 to me and I will send you a set by mail postpaid. Clinton, N. C. Will be in Pittsboro court week. Look for car with metal plate sign. Mrs. Ed Hinton is visiting her sis ter in Salisbury. ‘j Beeßrand ’ protects the baby/ j Files are filthy things. They carry germs and disease. They are a menace. Keep them out. lou can If you use Bee Brand Insect Powder. It will kill every fly II you close doors and windows and blow it about the room. It’s quite harmless to human beings. It can’t explode. It’s Safe. 1 It also kills Mosquitoes, Roaches, Bed Bugs, Ants, Fleas, Water Bugs, Moths, Lice on Fowl and many other house and garden insects. Get. Bee Brand in red sifting top cans at your frocer sor druggist’s. Household sizes, 10c and sc. Other sizes, 50c and SI.OO. JHk can’t supply you, send 25c for large || ~ for McCormick & Co. ( —1 Look at your label. / c/ino ifeTTUfMBUGS^I Bureau Os Health Education, North Carolina State Board Os Health I ACIDOSIS iffly y*a]CIDOSIS is not a disease, it is a symptom. It is a condition found associated with many MWw-1| diseases, but most frequently i in acute gastro-intestinal in fections, and not infrequently with in fluenza and pneumonia. Many of the cases of so-called “biliousness” are un doubtedly cases of acute gastrointes tinal infection which so prominently show the symptom of acidosis. This symptom has also led to the erroneous diagnosis of bronchopneumonia in children. The breath of the child suffering w'ith this condition has a peculiar and characteristic “sweetish” odor. Usual ly there is scanty secretion of saliva, consequently a dry tongue. The peptic glands also secrete a scanty amount of gastric juices. The urine is acid and shows traces of albumin. There is vomiting, complete lack of appetite, even disgust for food and a fever rang ing from 102 to 104 and in ; severe cases, still higher. The attack may come on suddenly and without previous recognized gas tric disturbance, it may follow an anesthetic or it may complicate any of the acute infectious diseases — measles, diphtheria or scarlet fever. In severe cases there are symp toms of profound toxicity with stupor or even a comatose or semi-comatose condition. Vomiting is more uncon- I trollable in the severe cases and even the smallest quantities of food or w'a- I ter will not be retained. The stools contain mucous and sometimes undi gested particles of food and streaks of blood. The condition is most often found In that class of children who are high strung, nervous and hypersensitive. It is due to a decreased amount of alkalin salts in the blood and a de creased amount of carbon dioxide given off by the lungs. Some authori ties have stated that a careful ex amination of the throat will always show deep seated, submerged, swollen tonsils. Extreme prostration and grave tox icity demand the neutralization of the acidity as soon as possible before the danger point of collapse has been reached. Mild, neglected cases have been seen to grow rapidly worse with in twenty-four hours and be rapidly followed by convulsions; coma and death. Many of' the deaths which oc cur are the result of neglect early ir the case. Acidosis in children is far too serious a condition to permit of ■ wasting valuable time with home ! remedies or to wait 1 to see what is , going- to develop. rare operation SAVES GIRL’S LIFE Food Enters Her Stomach Through a Tube. Indianapolis, Ind. —A long fight for the life of thirteen-year-old Beatrice McCrary of Rushville, Ind., has been won and the girl will live and thrive, as the result of a daring and unusual operation. Food is taken into the girl’s stomach through a tube through the chest con nected with the stomach. The child, ten years ago, swallowed a quantity of lye and the scars in the passage way from her mouth had become eo constricted that it was impossible for solid foods to pass. To keep her from starving, a severe operation dilating the passageway from the mouth was performed forty three times, records show. This operation was so painful that a general anesthesia was necessary each time. Following the operations the girl would be able to take fond for a time until the burn scars again would close the passage. The child had suffered the pangs of hunger many times and she had learned to know the horror of a painful siege on the operating table. The name of the surgeon to whom the operation was intrusted was not made public. Tlie operation was car ried out by making an incision through the chest wall and stitching an opening in the stomach wall to the borders of this incision, leaving an opening to the stomach from the ex terior. For several days after the operation tlie life of the little patient hung in the balance, but with the healing of the wound, and tlie introduction of food through the new route, recovery was rapid. During the last few days . before leaving the hospital, Beatrice gained weight at the rate of a pound a day. GIVES UP K. P. JOB jK, * V \J9 *** A J? „ ■ George Hocking, a student of Reed college, Portland, Ore., who lias been earning Ids education by washing dishes in a restaurant, has won first prize of SI,OOO in a national essay contest conducted by the Chemistry Foundation, Inc,, of New York. So he has resigned his dishwashing job and will use the $1,000" to complete his college course. Italy to Oust Lawyers “Inimical to State” Rome. —Lawyers whose activities are regarded an inimic&r to 1 the Ital ian state henceforth will not bfc per mitted' to" practice their profession, according to a decree which went into' effect’ recently. “Lawyers and attorneys w y ho hftVe ‘ carried out public activity in contra diction of the interests of the nation 1 are not to be admitted to the bar and those who are already members must be expelled,” says the decree' issued by the Fascist authorities. The new oath that is prescribed calls upon the legal candidate to j promise “to fulfil professional duties with loyalty, honor and diligence for the superior ends of justice and the superior interests of the nation.” II Love Kindles Again, T • • Reunites Pair, 61-60 J II New York. —A lad and a lassie, 21 •• sixty-one and sixty years old, •* II who had been sweethearts to- II * * getlier in Scotland, were reunited * * II by the arrival here of the liner .. •• Tuscania. The bride-to-be, Mrs. * * 11 Buchanan Brice, who arrived .. •• from Wishaw, Scotland, is a I! widow. The bridegroom-to-be, .. ’; James Winning, also had been ** .. married. " Twenty-four years ago Mrs. *j .. Brice lost her first husband. Mr. «• ’I Winning’s wife died 12 years 11 • • ago. Two years ago he returned •• II to Scotland and discovered that II •• his boyhood sweetheart no •• II longer was married. He took II •• the first train to Wishaw to re- II sume courting. After some de- II *• lay the banns were proclaimed. •• II Mrs. Brice refused, however, II *• to agree to an early marriage. •• II Also there was the matter of the II *• Scotch quota with which to con- •• 11 tend. So it was two years before 11 * • Jimmie saw his bride-to-be walk- * • II ing down the gangplank. II j t"i iI I H-l-h-H-H i|l]|. | 1 | i? THE CHATHAM RECORD SCIENTISTS TOLD OF WONDERFUL FIND Ancient Ruins Yield Astronom ical Observatory. New York. —The oldest astronomical observatory in the Western hemi sphere, dating back centuries before the coming of the white man, may have been unearthed from the ruins of the ancient Maya city of Copan, in Guatemala, according to information laid before the National Academy of Sciences recently by Dr. John C. Mer riam, president of the Carnegie in stitution of Washington. Although the institution Is not yet ready to designate it definitely as such, Doctor Merriam told the members of the academy that the institution’s archeological expedition to Yucatan and Guatemala had partially exca vated a structure, which, from con struction and position, gave every In dication of having been used by the Maya priests for astronomical obser vations. Considerable data had previously been obtained showing that these In dians, who set up the greatest abo riginal culture in the Western hemi sphere, were probably accomplished astronomers. They developed a re markably accurate calendar, and it is hoped that the discovery of their ob servatory may now assist in more ac curate correlation of the Maya and Christian calendars. Another important discovery this season, Doctor Merriam told the academy, was that of a much older and much more beautiful temple buried beneath another temple at ! Chicken Itza, where tlie Maya had their religious capital, in Yucatan. This new temple has just been found beneath the Temple of the Warriors, ■ now almost completely excavated, and It may push the date of the first founding the Chicken Itza back lxtafty more years. The only theory yet advanced to ex plain the presence of the new buried temple. Doctor Merriam r:;M, is that some high priests, jealous or'”’- ar tistic achievements qj’ .■ predecessor, determined to eh ace the v r? his handiwork and built the larger Tem pie of the Warriors . piarely over the earlier one. Modern civilization, how ever, has not only uncovered his de ceit, but it lias found that his art was Inferior to that of his predecessor. ■*> •" ««. ■? s, New Bullet Increases ’ w Range of Machine Gun Cheyenne, Wyo.—Tlie machine gun of 1925 vintage, a 50-caliber Browning type, appears as a challenge to the effectiveness of the Seixante-Quinze, famous artillery piece of the World war. Experiments and maneuvers exe cuted by the Seventy-sixth field ar tillery stationed at Fort D. A. Rus sell, disclosed that the improved ma chine gun has an effective range of 4,000 and 5,000 yards and a maximum range of 7,000 yards. The use of a new design of bullet, with a beveled, streamlined base, instead of the for mer square base, was said to be re sponsible for the increased range. Tlie gun shoots at a rate of 500 bullets a minute and falls on a 45- degree ungle on a battery redoubt, thus being a possible factor In wiping out an entire battery crew. v . Tubby's Out Tampa, Fla. —Tubby has had htg night out. A trail of broken fences, trampled' hedges arid fallen clothes lines marks his path through a resi dential district of the city. Tubby Is none other than a huge circus ele phant who’ broke" fils' moorings and created' no" little stir among Tampa residents before being tolled back to 1 the circus by liis trainer! EXECUTORY NOTICE "uving qualified as executor un-'o’ the last will and testament of Mrs. Mollie Churchill, , deceased, late of the county of Chatham, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 19th day of JUNE 1927, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This JUNE THE 19TH, 1926, H. C. Sears, Executor Morrisville, N. C., Route one Good Morning, Professor Oscar Coffin has been formal ly elected head of the depart ment of journalism at the Uni- DR. J. D. GREGG At Bonlee Monday, Tuesday, and Wed nesday of each week. At Liberty Thursday, Friday, and Saturday ELKINS FUNERAL PARLOR Offers Superior Funeral Service Embalming *- y •_\ > Caskets • Accessories * Coffins - , r-‘ » » Separate Hearse Service Main tained for Colored Patrons V , DR. LUTHER C. ROLLINS * DENTIST Tt Siler City, N, C. Office over Siler Drug Store,- 4 Hours 8 a. m., to 5 p. m. Isn’t, This Impossible? “If Smith is to run again for Governor,” says the News and Observer, “it is of the highest importance that the Democrats in New York nominate their greatest man for Senator and see to it that he gets as many votes as Smith can poll.” But if Smith is not to be the candi date how can they put up “their greatest man”? And how can any other man be expected to poll as many votes as Smth? The thing is impossible. j Standards. I The nationally known roofing products sold ex clusively in this territory by Budd-Piper are standards for judging: Johns-Manville Asbestos Roofing; I Richardson Super-Giant Shingles; Rubbercid Strip Shingles; f ICorco Galvanized Roof- X ing and Shingles; Potts’ A. L. T. Roofing Tin; | Buckingham and Vt. Slate; 0 Ludowici Tile Roofing. s \ ; y/ie BUDD - PIPER -.7*, ROOFING CO. ' ' DURHAM " r T : W.i N'C' v - • si f frit}:.. it -/.:>■ ~r. » * « Have Your Car Washed at - I Boone’s Service Station Just out of town south of Court House. No sudstitute with us. We e satisfaction. Remember us for- Gas, Oils, and Gennine Service# • ! t: R. E. Boone, Manager! ' • \ y/ -vs mlir-wt *.;???! V'r,,} y~,.i j Perry’s Garage I Phone 400 SANOFRD N. C j I . "-Dealers i I t ■ .u | Dodge Brothers Motor Car f Parts and Service. . Castoria is especially prepared Y" " > to reHieve Infants in arms and ' - r ' • ? , Children all ages of Gonstipa- ' ' , Jon! /Elatulency/ Wind., Colfc :■ V . and Diarrhea % allaying aflsmg thef’ef tetrti;- dnd, £ by ' regulating the Stomach' and ?Bowels,, aicls the ‘of Food; .giving healthy and natural sleep. I To avoid imitations, always look for*the signature of . ; Absolutely Harmless -No Opiates;' Physician*, everywhere recoramendj it. ;: ' ’ - inti e r :i 1 -■ i v * o-j* . _ ... R. L. PUGH & SON Complete Funeral Service Hearses for white and colored patrons Bonlee, N. C. A. C. RAY Attomey-at-Law \ PITTSBORO, N. C. W. B. CHAPIN, M. D. ■ PITTSBORO, N. C. Office Now Opposite Former Office Telephones: Office, 43. Residence, 3£ Come to Our SHU-FIXERY and have your shoes renewed Pittsboro, N. C. Page Three
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1926, edition 1
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