Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / Nov. 12, 1917, edition 1 / Page 6
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TWIN-CITY SENTINEL. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. NOVEMBER 12. 1917. "MY FOUR YEARS IN GERM AN Y"-AMB ASS ADOR GERARD'S Bo sfVi f i a i t rt ri rt r si r IV n 1 .i T. . Tr. T?. s I7i ft Tt. ft vwuumui V4f'.i'wf TENDENCY OF GERMAN LIBERALISM TOWARD EflSIESTJpSITION At Congress After War It Will Be Easy for Nations to Deal With Representatives of a Liberal Germany, With a System Still Monarchical in Form, But With Some Notable Features of Really Repre sentative Government By JAMES V. GERARD American AmbuMartor at the (rrman Imperial Court. July 38, IBIS, to February 4, 1917. Copyright, ItIT, by (lie Public ledger Company. Copyright, aniula. IIT. by thn Public l1arrr Company. International copy, rtalil. b it kVuhl? Ilger Couipuny. All rigbu reserved. Any in- frlnifinicnl will be nruwouleu. i Continued from Saturday's Bentlnol.) Many Wit and Far-Saalng Men In th Centrum Party It ia too mui h to expect that the Ontruni party a a whole and at at pretent constituted will de lare for liberalism and parliamentary government, and for fair redisricting of the divltiont in Germany whli-h elect member of the Reichstag, but there are many wine and farseeing men In this party, and ita leader. Doctor Spuhn and Erzberger, are fearless and able men. At the rongress w hich will meet after the war It will be eaay for the nations of the world to deal with the representative of a liberal Germany, with rep. reseotatives of a Government (till monarchical in form, but possessed of eith er a constitution like that of the I'ntted State or ruled by a parliamentary government. Ernest Transition la Likely I believe that the tendency or German liberalism I toward the easiest transition, that of making the Chancellor and his Minister responsible to the Reichstag and bound to resign after a vote of want of ronfldence by that body. At the time of the Zabern affair Scheldeiuann asserted that the resignation of the Chancellor must logically follow a vote of want of confidence, and It was the Chancellor who refused to resign, saying that he waa responsible to the Emperor alone. It requires no violent change to bring about this estab lishment of parliamentary government, and. If the members of the Reichstag should be elected from districts fairly constituted, the world would then be dealing with a liberalized Germany and a Germany which has become liberal lied without any violent change In the form of its government. Of course, coincident with this parliamentary reform the vicious circle system of voting In Prussia must end. This change to a government by a responsible ministry can be accomplished under the constitution of the German Empire by a mere majority vote of the Reichstag and a vote in the Uundesrat. In which less than fourteen votes are against the proposed change In the constitution. This mean that the con sent of the Emperor as Prussian King must be obtained, and that of a number of the rulers of the German States. In the reasonable liberalization of and hU father-in-law, Mosse, will play the Tageblatt, which Mosse owns and beacon light at once of reason and apers will take the same enlightened i am truly sorry for Georg Bern hard, the talented editor of the Vos slsche Zellung. who, a Liberal and Jew. wears the livery of Junkerdora, 1 am sure to his great distaste. After I left Germany the Vossische Zeltung made the most ridiculous charges against me such as that 1 Issued American passports to British. The newspaper might as well have solemnly charged that I sent notes to the foreign office In sealed envelopes. Having charge of British Interests. I could not issue British passports to British citizens allowed to leave Ger many, but according to universal cus tom in similar cases and the express consent of the imperial foreign office, I gave these returning British Ameri cans passports superstamped with the words "British subject." A mare's nest, truly. The fall of Von Bethmann-Hollweg was a triumph of kitchen intrigue and of junkeriam. I believe that he is Liberal at heart, that it was against his best Judgment that the ruthless ALL RUN-DOWN Says This Lady Who Had To Support Family of Four Read Below Her Statement About Cardui Tallapoosa, Ga. Mrs. Sallle Edison, of thla piflce, writ: 'J wts In very poor heallb. all rin-down, nervous, had falntlW spills, dizziness and heart fluttertBg.l had these symp tom usually Jny . . . times. I had a very hard tlrJW working for seven years in a hotel afktr my father died. I had to suppot ouramlly of four. I read the Bthday Ttjmanac and thought I woJld begin taNtng Cardui. I received gd benefit fromS 1 am mire it will all that it clalnisVtp do I took thr or four bottles beforvjt uegan ionow errerts. After that T improvedrapidly and gained in health and strngth. I took nine bottles in II. Tflig Is the only time I have tak en It. 1 was down to log pounds and I gained to 122. I felt like new wo man. I couldn t sleep before and had to be rubbed, 1 would get so nervous and dnmb. And all this was stopped fcy Cardui." The true value of a medicine can be determined only by the results obtain ed from it actual use. The thou sands of letters we have received every year for many years from grate ful users of Cardui .are powerful trib ute to it worth and effectiveness. If you suffer' from womanly all jnent. try Cardui, the woman's tonic. J (AuvL) NERVOUS Germany, If it comes, Theodore Wolf leading pacts. The great newspaper, Wolff edits, ha thruout the war been of patriotism. And other great news course. submarine war was resumed, the pledges of the Sussex note broken and Germany involved In war with Amer ica. If he had resigned rather than consented to the resumption of U-boat war, he would have stood out as a great Liberal rallying point and prob ably have returned to a more real power than he ever possessed. But half because of a desire to retain of fice, half because of a mistaken loyal ty to the emperor, he remained in of fice at the sacrifice of his opinions and when he laid down that office, no title of Prince or even Count wait ed him as a parting gift. In his retire ment he will read the lines of Schiller a favorite quotation in Germany "Der Mohr hat seine Scbullghelt ge tan, der Mohr kann gehen." "The Moor has dona his work, the Moor can go." and in his old age he will ex claim as Shakespeare make the great Chancellor of Henry the Eng lish exclaim, "Oh, Cromwell, Crom well! Had I but served my Ood wfth half the zeal I served my King, he would not. In mine age, have left me baked to mine enemies." But this god Is not the private war god .of the Prus sians with whom they believe they have a gentleman' working agree ment, but the God of Christianity, of humanity and of all mankind. It would have been easier for Ger many to make peace with von Bethmann-Hollweg at the helm. The whole world knows him and honors blm for hi honesty. Helqerlch remained as Vice Chan cellor and Minister of the Interior. A powerful, an agile intellect, a man, I am eure, opposed to militarism. Reas onable in bis views, one can alt at the council table with blm and arrive at compromise and results, but hi Intense patriotism and surpassing ability make him an opponent to be feared. Kuehlmann ha the foreign office. Far more wily than Zlmmermann, he will continue to atrive to embroil u with Japan and Mexico, but he will not be caught. Second in command in London, he reported then England would not enter the war. The rumor, scattered broadcast as he took office, to the effect that he wa oppoed to ruthless U-boat war, werte but evlden ca of a more skillful hand in a cam paign to predispose the world in hi favor, and, therefore, to assist him in any negotiations he might have in the carpet. Beware of the wily Kuehl mann! Balling the chancellor is the fav orite sport of German political life. No sooner does the Kaiser name a chancellor than hundred of little poli ticians, relchstag member, editor, reporters and female intriguer try to drive him from office. When von Bethmann-Hollweg showed an Inclination toward liberalism and advocated a Juster electoral system for Prussia, the junker, the military and the np-1 holders of the caste system. Joined their force to those ot the usual in .t,,. nnj I iriKUArl ind It V11 nnlV finnelU. triguers and It was only a quostion of time until the chancellors official head fell in the basket. Ills successor Is a Prussian bureau crat. No further description Is neces sary. Of course, no nation will permit it self to be reformed from without. The position of the world In arms with ref erence to Germany I simply this: It Is Impossible to make peace with Ger many as at present constituted, be cause that peace will be but a truce, a short space before the German mil itary autocrats again send the sons of Germany to doath In the trenches for the advancement of the system and the personal glory and advantage of stuffy old generals and prancing princes. The world does not believe that a free Germany will needlessly make war, believe in war for war's lake, or take up the profession ot arms as a national Industry. The choice lies with the German people. And how admirably ha our great President shown that people that we war not with them but with the autocracy which has led them Into the shamble of dishonor. I was credited by the Germans with having hoodwinked and Jollied the foreign office and the government into refraining for two years from using illegally their most effective weapon. This, of course, Is not so. I always told the foreign office the plain, sim ple truth, and the event showed thai I correctly predicted the attitude ot America. Our American national game, poker, has given us abroad an unfair reputa tion. We are always supposed to be bluffing. A book was published in Germany about the President, called "President Bluff." I only regret that those high in au thority In Germany should have pre ferred to listen to pro-German cor respondent who posed aa amateur su per-ambassadors, rather than to the authorized representatives of America. I left Germany with a clear conscience and the knowledge that I had done everything possible to keep the peace. Keeping the Country Informed. An ambassador, of course, doe not determine the policy of his own coun try. One of his principal duties, if not the principal one, is to keep his own country Informed to know be forehand what the country to which he Is accredited will do, and I think that I managed to give, the state de partment advance Information of the moves of the rulers of Germany. I had the support of a Toyal and de voted staff of competent secretaries and assistants, and both Secretaries Bryan and Lansing were most kind in the backing given by their very ably organized department. 1 sent Secretary Lansing a confiden tial letter every week and. of course, received most valuable hints from him. Secretary Lansing was very suc cessful In his tactful handling of the American ambassadors abroad and in getting them to work together as cheerful members .of the same team. Shock on Returning to America. When I returned to America after living for two and one-half years in the center of this world calamity every thing seemed petty and small. 1 was surprised that people could llll seek little advantage, still be actuated by little Jealousle and revenge. FreeJ from the round of dally work, I felt f or the first time the utter horror and use lessness of all the misery these Prus sian military autocrats had brought upon the world, and what a reckoning there will be in Germany some day when the plain people learn what base motives actuated their ruler in con demning a whole generation o the earth to war and death The Soul of Ten Million Dead. I it not a shame that tho world should have been o disturbed; that peaceful men are compelled to lie out In the mud and filth in the depth of raw winter, shot at and stormed at end shelled, waiting tor a chance to murder ome other inoffensive fellow creature? Why must the people in old Poland dlo of hunger, not finding dogs enough to eat in the streets of Lein berg? The long line of broken pens ants in Serbia 'and Roumanla; the population of Belgium and northern France torn from the-lr homes tp work a slaves far the Germans ; tho ooor prisoners of war starving (a their huts or working In factories and mines; the cries of the old end the children-, wounded by bombs from ZepoeIlns;the wails of the mothers for their sons: the very rusllng of the air as the oulj of the ten million dead sweep to an other world why must all these hor rors come upon a fair green earth where we believed that love and help and friendship, genius and science and commerce and religion and civilization once ruled? . The very bodies of these ten million killed, If placed end to end in two lines, would reach from New York to San. Francisco. Think of traveling this distance between a double line of staring corpses! It 1 because In the dark, cold, northern plain of Germany there exists an autooracy, deceiving a great people, poisoning. tlielr mind from one gen eration to another al preaching the virtue anl necessity of war. And un til that autocracy in either wiped out or made powerless there can be no peace on earth. The golden dream of concfuest was almost accomplished. A little more advance, a, few more wagonloada ot ammunition and there would have been no battle of the Marne, no Joffre, a modern Martel to hammer back the invadmg horde cf barbarism. I have always stated that Germany la possessed yet of Immense military power, and in order to win, the na tions opposed to Germany must learn to think ln a military way. The mere entrance of even a great nation like our own into the war means nothing; In a military way unless backed by mili tary power. And there must 'be- no German peace. The old regime lore in control ll yjrvrJIlUlly IVUIUICU Jjy lliuruiiiivr ujiivuy Jf 1 lie CA o. Tqjj I r of Germany, of Bulgaria, of Turkey, would only seek a favorable moment to tenew the wnr. to strive again for the mastery of the world. Fortuntely America bur the way America, led by a fighting President, who will allow no compromise wlt!i brutal autocracy. INFLUENCE IN ALSACE'S German Families Being Moved Into Alsace-Loraine; Liquidat ing Industries Controlled By French. iJ hkry woo in (United Pren Htaff Cnrrn"iiduiiO t With the French Annies, Oct. 27., uiy Mail) becret information from I Alsace and Lorraine reaches the: French miliary authorities dally, rela tive to the steps now being taken I there by the Germans, to render It! certain that If a plebiscite were helit to decide whether the two provinces preferred to belong to France or tier many. the result would be in favor ot the latter Altho at the time Germany annexed Alsace and Lorraine she declined ab solutely to allow the question to be ubmltted to a plebiscite, she now ap pear very anxious to have the ulti mate disposition of the two provinces settled ln that manner. In the mean time active steps are being taken to see that Alsace and Lorraine are In habited, at least at rne time of the proposed plebiscite, by a German ma jority. According to the Information reach ing France, a steady colonization has now been eolnr nn for rma Hm German families are being moved In - to the two nrovlnrm aattiA ihA, until the ultimate fate of Alaco and conference 1 at t!le ppace I of course. But its perpetrator lll de- C0Gemany i also pushing to a quick pend D ratltuda of 'he W'Mh completion the liquidation of all the inston stenogs to protect him from fcreat manufacturers snd other Indus-1 the wrath ot the non-Washington tries owned by French capital or hv i group, and proceed with details. people of known French proclivities. Many of these properties are valued at millions of dollars .They are bptn. sold to German shareholders and cnn. cerns hv the German government at iues nxea oy the Istter. Prssumahlv ln the end the French owners will re ceive back a portion of the proceeds. In this way' Germany Is seeking to wipe out not only the French ponula- FOR II When Wlnston-6lsm Citizens Show a Way There can be no reamin tt-hv reader of this who suffer, tho t.Jjit. stroll down Fourteenth streat any tures of an aching bacjf the annoW: ance or lirlnary dlsonrs, the pains n,le anv evPln V fnvsnceu. and dangkr of klda ills will falljto lts eno"K,w'to mafllij mn. who heed the Vordsf a neighbor v4io',al(l that brala and Ufiy ar has found rlar Read what this Win-1 P"1"- nKh'y oiN4irT he spce. It's ston-Salem JCzen says: V j sufficient to fciake jour head swim 3. W. nnchV, prop, furniture store I aml youhe;t come to thefsurfaco 703 Tjtde t, says: "My back I and bounfli Atround on the faves. achedand whenV I lifted anything ' li'ar 'Trom 119 t0 particularize, heavy, sharp paimfcaught me In myThe hol.blad Jf matrimony and a kldrfeys. At times Xy kidnevs aMnrl ! general aofualntance wlthut least a irrtgularly, causing n much mlsem I I finally got Doan'a KfHney Pill at i OHanlon'a Drug Store, artti after lug a few doses I was relieved of the pain in my back. The first box made me feel very much better In every way. I used in all about three boxes ! of Doan's Kidney Pills and since then, ! I haven't had any kidney trouble." ' i ouc. ai an dealers. Foster-Mllburn ; Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y, (Advt.) IT "4 Employe of Forsyth Chair Com- party Tells Why He Will Never, Be Without Dreco Intercst-i ing Story. " jr ! f fashing eyes as Fritz, the Boche. J. E. Hodges who resldtiefat 119 Cen-i w"' 8COre RsalnRt t-'ncle Sam, witli ter street, Winston-Sajami, is perhaps ;n,s farefHy aimed munitions, onersvthe most populhr emplovees oW Tnat ma" nut it a bit strontrly, hut the Kor-th Chair Ufimpany. Heisai"osh; " certainly looks reasonable memberf the Juior Order and a ! from wnere wo sit. number o other raternal and xnfiii organizathV (SALEM BAND CONCERT; Recently r.llodges was troubled i with a severPkjform of kidnev trouble combined vif indigestion," Iors of sleep and rMurnVtic pains in the buck and limbs A frVnd told him about me wonuerrui new herbal called lco which now Krl H aucea in mis section, and nrevailed upon Jlira to give it aMrial. Thu i. rwhahe says after onlAa bottle n'r Dreo. , Afy pains and stomach tmnble sre all gone. So Is the kidney disorder'. I made a mistake ln not getting an other bottle as oon as the first gave out but I'll never do that apafn for Dreco put new life into inn, all right ! I want all my friends to try it." No two cases of stomach trouble, kidney disorder or similar ills seem to be exactly alike. Some will require more Dreco than others before the suf ferer can say "I am cured at last!" It 1. ...All .1 A , '. is iiinieiiHv ncii i . a id Keen a.-! good supply of this medicine on hand ; at all times, if only as a matter of Dre-i caution. . - Dreco is sold and recommended In i Winston-Salem by O'Hanlon's Drug I I.. , , , .1. 1 ..... tlon but all lullueac which the latter might exert. Kor some time past Germany has similarly been exerting a control i.p Jt. tlie Protestant church in Alsace and Lorraine to tho same end. Pus tors of known' French ympatble are being suspended from their offices and iiiuuUnled bv ministers known i lu favor Germany. Some have even ; been Imprisoned, and others obliged I to resign from the Metz Coucistory. The president of the Directory of the burg Coutoss.on was even dcsll- and replaced by Huron von der While French military authorities declare that Prance under the circum stance could never accept a plebls-! aminatlon day. Thursday, December 6; cite, cney doubt seriously If that form modern health crusade day, Friday, of solution will now ever be nopos.d. ' December 7; and tuborculosl 8unday They base this belief on the fact that 'which will bo observed In North Car s.nce the beginning of the war, Ger- olina, December 9. many has changed half a dozen time , The bureau of tuberculosis at the her various proposals for solving tho ' State Sanatorium Is sending literature question. In spite of the steps bclnjiand letter to J.200 preachers In the iakv'n to Insure a plebiscite being fa- state urging upon them the importance raiile for Germany, the latter, up parently already convinced that this method would not be acceptable. Is suggesting newer and apparently more liberal solutions. DISPROVED AT CAPITAL Pretty War Stenographers Turn Heads of Mighty U. S. Officials I Br .KHfi .MAHTIM (I'niled Prem ffi.,orreionlnl) Washington, Nov. 10. The record, of America's part in the greatest warj ln hltitory is being hammered out on ' government typewriters by the pret- ;tleBt and imarlest tenographer in I the rntintrr. j There's dynamite In that' statement. Of course, It is impossible to quote; 1 President Frank A. Vanderllp, of tha ! National City Bank, now a treasury ; employee; or Food Administrator Iter-! ' bert Hoover, or Chairman Howard Collin, of the Air Board, or Kdward N. Hurley, of the Shipping board, or Barney Baruch. But It's all right to camouflage and say that "big busi ness men assembled from all over the country say the click-click corps com prises the "t-. and most efficient ofUidnd in America." The cwn of the nation's" tJeorgette Crepe yrwttallona have corn here. Thevftave enlleted, powder puffs and alhor the duration of the war Sher mVi didn't take everything into con sideration when he uttered hit well .Unown niBniuon. iij.raj ugniuee morning, o along tenylvanli ave- couple of mindred of thetyping tan tlllsers demand broad generalities tak-land nothing more 't However, If you arr curious, wan rfsjr thru the offices of the Conucil of National Defense. TJaTte a peek around 0"'I Administration hulldins.and the Fue,AJrffil8tratlon. 'Nor has this galaxy of The Glorl- oua left Washington masculinity un- scathed. catnea. More man one snowy-nair-, d he-hftad has been turned and many, j .,,,fi ,i .mi.,i,f, I e many youthful and semi-youthful hearts have been Reared up to a mile a minute gait, since America entered the war. And, it wasn't patriotism that did it, either. As one venerable and disgusted departmental chief nut it: "They're making love while we're making war." .Nor are the lads ln uniform im mune. u is sate 10 say mat cuplrt, com- parutively sneaking, will at the eml of the war bo found to have scored a j I : many casunlll'.B among dashing of-! I nrers with carefully aimed batteries BO V SCOUT KFVPiViT The Salem band has arrange,) to ronder a musical Droerani SnturrUv evening. v'ovember 17. Memorial Hall :r:? ;. '8U:,, in Ihe P"-i gram will he Miss Alene Baker, of tne saiem faculty, Rev. J. K. Pfohlaa vocal soloist. Another pleading num ber on the program will bo a medley of popular al-s played hv a mandolin club, composed of a number of local collesians. This concert has been arranged for the benefit of the Bov Scouts of the city. The proceed, will s0 to the treas ury of the different troops. Tickets will be given to each division of boy. Monday afternoon. The full program has not vet been announced. However, rvireet'n,. n i r ,imi nays mere will h a vaHqt., r " ' a p"p" 9r '"br on he ,oro.fra.m' a"d the musicians Rre ... mumr snape tnan ever for concert Wr cn,nt r, , mtftintmitt ni. mvnr I TUBERCULOSIS WEEK WILL BE OBSERVED The first week In December Is Tu berculosis Week. These eight days, from the 2nd to the 9th, have been set apart for giving serious consideration to a serious problem. "How to Han die the Tuberculosis Problem In Con nection with the War," will be the principal topic to be discussed and act ed upon during the days of observance, says the state board of health. Instead of observing every day or Tuberculosis Week, It has been decid ed by the National Tuberculosis Asso elation to concentrate all energies on three day. These will be medical ex of stressing from the pulpit this ques tion that so vitally affects every phase of the nation's well-being. The press is being asked to publish on Tubercu losis Sunday Rauschenbush's Tuber culosis Prayer which aoulfully express es the will of the worker in regard to "this slow death that creeps from man to man." JAPAN PROHIBITS TIPS AS UNHEALTHY HABIT Hy United prvM) Toklo, Oct, 15. (By Mail (There'll be no more tips on Japanese rail ronds. The government has decreed it. But not out of mere regard for the travel er. The government holds tips Injure MRS. BURNHAM JAMAICA, N. Y. Sufferings Cured by Medi- cine Recommended by Suter-in-law. Jamaica, N. Y. "I suffered greatly i my bead and with backache, was weak, dizzy, ner vous, with hot flashes and felt very miserable, a I wa irregular for two year. On day when I was feeline junusually bad my iistef-in-law came lin and said. ' (wish you would try Lydia E. Plnkham'a J Compound.' So I began! taking It and I am now Id good healtM and am'cured. I took the Com pound three titles a day after meals, and of retiring at night I always keep a bottle In the house, "-Mrs. L. N. Burnhau, 295 Sop th St, Jamaica, N.Y. Women who reoover their health nat urally tell other what helped them. Some write and allow their names and photographs to be published with testi monials. Many more tell their friends. "Write Lydia E. Pinkham Medi cine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mas for anything you need to know about your ailments. J CLOGS THE KIDNEYS I llliRIillllllllilllliil II Emm rv . i .-to u , , . . ' , . mui Tof Salt, if your Back hurt tongue coa J or JM ' or Bladder bothers tou Drink . bad taste, foul brtUM more water. - M ,,nm.( S if you must have youf meat everr da v. eat jt, but flush yourAidneys with salts , occasional Ijl says a ted authority who tells us thafWeat jRrms urio acid which j almost paraljV je kidneys in their ef ' fort to expelXrom the blood. They ; become sluggiajtaod weaken, theft you j suffer with ayfuX misery in the kidney V1011' narXpa"V'n the back or sick lfadllchf 1 d"iness, Viir tomach ours, , ue ,ycota una HJien the weather : u wu nave rueumfliiwxwinges. l ne j urine t cloudy, full ofdiment, the cnanls often get sore anoVimtated, obljrinB vou to seek relief twar thten tiafb durintr the nicht. I'o neutralize these irritatine acidsT eanse the kidnevs and flush off the body's urinous waste get four ounce of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days. ad your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations l . .tr.Ua the aci3. in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jure, and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-watcr drink. Nature Needs Assistance A little help goes a lo If you would keep your aealthy and robust conditio bing witb that splendid vitatlsjiyrliat indicate freedom from all kjMents, first of all that youpytloSd i keot oare. Anr slinrht impurity rst creeps into your blood will soon fi the weM-betpy ot your whole ytem: a lew bottle ot 5- a. a. wui giv it tb assistance that nature aeeds IHIU h Af . 11 I" . !.,,,, "' ""'If fdH -11 a r'i'iui:i)ti i an. I t .; . . s'" Mx'lr I '' high a, ,;. CW health, u , , r'"r.. Think of uV-;. "one 1 o ;.?. for I.'.;:, Use Black nd Vvr 25c. Mry Just trv ;'d Itn. I. l. "imp or (olrt' 1 dire tf.i i,n Ln ,.; to",; or nanus It u hkin find hits tr. , d.irk. .-ilinu- ... ; i"'- mm in r,nV2i k uiui-K,:cii'i. tan nrf, ' " "r- nrigM r .spi.r. Hie envy M-r,!j," nicnoy t,,-,, k riar,M .-'ui-ips nr mini by cj; .. Agf-n's. upjlv forlJ spcmi flrsi. Adirxifc. ai Co.. lli-pt. 4; )(,.. WRITE NOW T0DV YOU THINK ABOUT IT- Hot Water t Sick Head Tells why evtrYOTtfcJ hot water wiu In It before bmJ Headarh of any kM i auto-Intoxication whit ti poisonlnis Liver and Is railed toilm, sucked lu through the lymph im heart which puoipi lb w that It roDgcati k tie mi and veins of th-Ueid rl lent, throbbing pal icSil headache. You A owm spondent. sick, your meals eonr you. Then you aspirin or the broml arily relievo but do tot these. Irritating toMi A glass of hat wati ful of limestone pb& before breakfast onlv wa?h these ism tern and cure ya ot t cleanse, rurifjaad fc4 Alimentary JRrii Ask vaT rliarmsriit fc nound of limestone ptaf expensive, harmlesiuwl most taste ess, Mcesm twinge which Is not If von area t iea::n i,li,l,.n h nllSSHl 1 ptmted hot water tm system of toxlM Results are quick ml that those who mntiM-j morning never ksw know a mieeratie s- tiirar.fll'iAr inn. to7""'S tat (4 u 1 D tit nn n. ULEHbll I oil 1 I Kim ; 0k HI a wwr v . . .3 .WH i...:n the bW7H wonu" " i for kf rich and P"rc-. .. thtrtl petite andtonc . mnre thm n-I-,'rfI8 in practically 'J it, ereat worth. UH tree Co.. V""
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1917, edition 1
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