PAGE TWO
SALISBURY EVENING POST, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1920
freckles
Don't Hide Them With Veil; Re
move Them With Othine Double
Strength.
This Dreoentlon for the removal
of freckle it usually io successful in
removing freckles and giving a clear,
beautiful complexion that it is som
under iruarantee to refund the money
if it fails.
Don't hide your freckles under a
veil; get an ounce of Othine and re
move them. Even the first few appi
cations should show a wonderful im
provement, some of the lighter freck
les vanishing entirely.
Be sure to ask the druggist for the
double strength Othine; it is this that
is sold on the money-tack guarantee.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT WORKING TO
CHECK THE SPENDTHRIFT TENDENCIES
Pile Sufferers
Can You Answer These Questions?
Do you know why ointments do not
give you quick and lasting relief?
Why cutting and operations fail?
Do VP-' I. now the cause of piles is
internal ?
Th:i! c i-' ;i f-'njrnaton of blooc!
n !h( ! "wv b.nv!?
Do ! know tl -.! there is a horm-
i ! ' ! i:i:'pt remedy discovered
! r ' . r.'.ur-h p.ni known as HEM
'?MI1 ti .v sold by Peoples Drug
S'ore uri'l driipgists generally, that is
Til 'rnfr-''? ?
HEM-ROID banishes piles by re
moving the internal cause, by freeing
blood circulation in the lower bowel.
This simple home treatment has an
almost unbelievable record for sure,
safe and lasting relief to thousands
of pile sic ksufferere, and saves the
needless pain and expense of an op
eration. There is no reason why it
should not r!o the xime for you.
Uurges People Not to Sell Their Liberty Bonds and Thrift
Stamps As They Will Reach Par, and Believe it is
Constructive Americanism for a Man 'Wont
Throw a Momb at His Bank.
it v w. s. MANN.
(Copyright, 1920.)
Washington, May ' 14. Economists
of many schools agree that no small
part of the present high cost of ne
cessities is due to spendthrift ten
dencies of many who are dinburning
with a too lavixh hand the wartime
wages and profits that atill are paid
to thousands. With a small but wide
ly distributed force of workers the
saving division of the treasury de
partment is working to counteract
thin tendency, and is meeting with
much encouragement, particularly in
the public schools and in some of the
large induiitrial centers.
The division is a branch of the ex
ecutive ami of the government and
never loses sight of the purpHe of
its organization, which is to sell thrift
stumps ami war savings stamps. But
in selling these small forms of gov
ernment securities it must of neces
sity preach the gospel of economy and
systematic saving, so much needed to
day. Thrift Dramatized.
"It is as easy to vivify thrift, to
dramatize it, as to dramatize any oth
r subject in the curriculum," said
William Mather I,ewis, director of the
bureau. "When a boy of 12 in Cali
fornia writes me that he has learned
thru war savings stamps how money
rolls up and that he has now earned
md saved $ff toward a coveted col
leec fducution when a newsboy is
-'inted out to me us the only one in a
fV.oo! room who has never missed a
vk in nurchasinir a thrift stamp;!
i;f n reports show nie that the school
u lr'rcn of Texas own about f 12,000,
:ro worth of thrift and war savings
t.iinps and that the boys and girls in
Ohio each bought an average of sev
en dollars worth of these securities
Lin 1919; when I learn of the economi
cal use of school supplies and the
care of school furnishings in those in
stitutions where the students earn
and save, I know that there is some
thing in thrift practically applied that
stirs the Imaginations of our future
citisens."
A report has just been complied
snowing the stamps sold In 22 mdus
stamps purchased a various timet.
Ttia bureau also ia doing much to
urge small holders of Liberty bonds
to hold on to their war time invest'
menti, instead of putting them on
the market for lefts than their face
value, or trading them for "wild-cat"
stock. An officer of the New York
restaurant men's organisation recent
ly asked the bureau to get out a state
ment "in words of one syllable ex
plaining the value of government se
curities, and this was distributed
among 60,000 waiters in the metropolis.
"If you sell your Liberty bond now i
. 1 a! 1 II ! 1 .. .
you are cneaiing yourseu, aaia ini.i j
statement in part. "The government
promised to pay you 100 cents for
every dollar you put into your bond,
but it did not promise to pay it to
Bora in 1839 Dr. Caldwell
Still in His Office Daily
Wonderful vigor of the founder of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Peptin.
Millions now use his famous prescription
. '
Physicians know that good health depends largely upon proper digestion and elimination
and that much sickness results from constipation. No one knows this better than
the "family" doctor, the general practioner.
trial olants. lanrc and small, in and . you this year. Read your bond and
around Philadelphia during the first .you will ee the year it comes due.
three months on the present year. Uncle Sam will pay you back in full
During that time 17.742 men and wo- 'on that date and in the meantime will
men bought starnos havine a total ! pay you every cent of interest he
value of $115,000. promised. Nobody who has lent our
In the New York Shipbuilding cor- i government money has ever lost it,
porution plant at Camden, N. J., the ! you will not. Hold to your Lib
s.ile.s amount to about $0,000 weekly. I erty bond and buy more."
The employes at thut place are par- One of the best features of the
ticularly enthusiastic over this form bureau is that through the federal re
of saving because of the less learnin? serve banks it reaches every part of
there durinir the war. When the war ; the country. Some of the best rec-
savings stamps and thrift stamps ord in tne purchase t of thrift and
were first offered, tlm men in the ; war savings stamps have been made
yard bought liberally, lartrelv from hy western communities nnd the re-
patriotic motives, many of them hav- sponse has been general. Treasury of- j
inor small idea of makinir -permanent ficials also regard this work as con-
investments. Late in 1918 when the in-; ftructive Americanism, for the pur
fluenza epidemic struck the city only : chase of such securities makes a man
the sale of these war savings stamps or woman a stockholder in the gov
hy the holders kept many stricken I ernment. And no man wants to throw
families from being dependent on 1 a bomb at his own bank.
diarity. They provided doctors and! ' -
nurses and were the means of sav- J CHAUTAUQUA PROGRAM.
ing many lives, and since that time
the Camden yards have furnished a
good market for the small govern
ment securities.
During the war the stamps could be
Day by Day Program of the Red path
Chautauqua Beginning Thir. Afternoon.
First Afternoon.
sold largely by uppPils to patriotism, introductory exercises
Caii be mida loner, atralitbt and silky by j
QUEEN SSir..,
Tfai I a rrrr d'jcov.ry. different from
II others. It v:U r.haolutely grow your
hair lone and mjoth. If your hair it
dry, brittlo and brealui oif. uu QUEEN.
It will give your liulr IV oil it oetda and
make It io pretty : -t will never be with
out Queen. Lend i'S cenu for box to
Newbro Mfg. Co., Atlanta, Cm.
Wo will pay you BIG MONET to .tall
roar friends about QUEEN and dlatrltuta
our advertising pamphlata. Write far
peclal money nuking offer. '
EXCESSIVE ACIDITY
is ct the bottom of most
digestive ills.
S1U
for IndigetHon afford pleas
ing and prompt relief from
the distress of acid-dyspepsia.
MAOR BT SCOTT A BOWNB
' ataincM or soorra emulsion
-JU
but in the last year and a half the
"selling talk" has been on economic
lines. The bureau maintains officers
in each of the twelve federal reserve
districts, including an educational di
rector who organizes the savings
work in the schools through the teach-
Grand concert Silby Sammis Singers
and Miss Mary Cameron, pianist
Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
First Night.
Concert Sibyl Sammis Singers and
Miss Mary Cameron, pianist
DR. W. B. Caldwell of Mon
ticello, Illinois, was and is a
family doctor. The whole
human body, not any small port
of it, was his practice. M ore than
half his "calls" were on women,
children and babies. They are
tbo ones most often sick. But
their illnesses wero usually of a
minor nature colds, fevers, head
aches, biliousness and all of
them required first a thorough
evacuation.They wereconstipated.
Dr. Caldwell in the course of 40
years' practice, for bo was grad
uated from Himh Medical College
buck in 1375, bad found a god
deal of success in such caies with
a prescription of his own contain
ing simple laxative berlia with
pepsin. In 1892 be decided to
Ma this formula in the manufac
ture of a medicine to be known as
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and
in that year the preparation was
first placed on the market. The
picture of Dr. Caldwell that ap
pears on the package was taken in
that year.
The preparation immediately
hnd as ,rreat a success in the drug
stores t it previously had in tins
doctor's private practice. Today
the third generation is using it.
Mothers are giving it to their
children who were given it by
their mothers. Every second of
the working day someone some
where is going into a drug store to
buy it, for Dr. Caldwell s Syrup
Pepsin is soiling at the rate of over
6 million bottles a year.
Its great success is based on
merit, on repeated buying, on one
satisfied user telling another.
There are thousands of homes in
this country that are never with
out a bottle of Syrup Pepsin, and
tho formulator of that prescrip
tion is fortunately living to see its
wonderful success.
Women, children and elderly
people are especially benefitted
by Dr. Caldwell's Syrup 'Pepsin.
While it is promptly effective on
the most robust constitution and
in the most obstinate cases, it is
mild and gentle in its action and
docs not cause griping and strain.
Containing neither opiates nor
narcotics, it is Bnfe for the tiniest
baby and children like it and take
it willingly.
Every drug store sells Dr. Cald
well's Syrup Pepsin. Keep a
bottle in your home. Where
many live someone is sure to need
it quickly.
lHlsW',Si'5vii$ -
mUksm
DR. V. B. CALDWELL TODAY
Bom SbelbrviUe, Mo.. March 27, 1339
. Began tbo manufacture of hi. la.uout pro
scripUon-ta KM
In spitfef iis fact t'uit Dr. CrJJ-
Hell's Smtp Ptpsin is iht Lrpat wling
liquid laxative n tfu worid, lime
being over 6 million bottles told each
year, many who need its fcenciti haw
not yet used it. If you havt not, send '
your nar.ie and address for a free trial
Bocae to Dr. V. D. CslaWl, 5n .
Was Kington Sc., MonticeUo, Illinois,
Concert
I Lecture
Third Afternoon. t Fifth Afternoon.
Mendelssohn Trio j Concert Orchestra
crs and voluntary aide. Because of Lecture "Facing the Task"
tha small number of employes the j Dr. H. E. Rompel
hcreau can do little individual can- Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
vassing. 1 Children 27c and 3c Tax
Co to College Clubs. I
A popular form of saving is the or-! Second Morning.
ganaiationVof "Go-to-QjUege-Qubs" Children's Hour
in the grade and high schools, where
nupils earn and save small sums week
ly or monthly to be used in paying
their way through college;. In th"
District of Columbia during ene month
this year there were 22,634 school
children who bought stamps having a
total value of $10,338.
t The bureau has not stopped at this.
I but has succeeded in getting these i
I stamps and their value explained in !
many of the school text books. The j
Kentucky teachers' manual contains ,
a treatise on these forms of securi
ties, and some arithmetics contain
Second Afternoon.
Concert .... Emerson Williams Co.
Monolokue To be Announced ....
Mr. V. S. Watkins.
Admissian 50c. and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
Second Night.
Concert Emerson Williams Co.
Lecture
"How to Be Young at Seventy or Old
at Forty"
Dr. Carolyn E. Geisel
Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
Third Morning.
problems in computing the value of Children's Hour
"The Wonders in Burbank"
Henry A. Adrian
Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
Third Night.
Grand Concert . . Louise Stallings and
Mendelssohn Trio
Admission 77c and 8c Tax
Children S6 and 4c Tax
Foarth Morning.
Children's Hour
Fourth Afternoon.
Grand Concert
New York Opera Singerj
Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
Fourth Night.
Concert .... New York Opera Singers
Lecture 'Human Nature and Politics"
Opie Read
Admissian 50c and 5c
Children 27c. and 3c
Fifth Morning.
Children's Hour
Lecture "Back to tho Farm"
Hon. C. G. Jordan
Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
Fifth Night.
Gilbert and Sullivan's Famous Opera
"H. M. S. Pinafore"
Special Scenic and Lighting Effects
Admission $1.00 and 10c Tax
Children 50c and 5c Tax
Tax
Tax
Sixth Morning.
Children's Hour
Sixth Afternoon.
Lecture "Modern Unrest"
Ronald H. McGibeny
Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
Sixth Night.
Delightful American Comedy
"Nothing But the Truth"
Admission $1.00 and 10c Tax
Childwi 50c and 5c Tax.
Seventh Morning
Children's Hour
Seventh Afternoon.
Children's Pageant
"The Good Fairy Thrift"
Concert . . Swis(s Singers and Yodlera
Admissian 50c and 5c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
Seventh : Night
Concert . . Swiss Singers and Yodlars
Lecture "Human Efficiency'
Ralph Tarlette
Admissian 50c and 6c Tax
Children 27c and 3c Tax
No senator holding office was ever
elected the presidency, but - GarfieH
was a senator-elect when nominated.
MOniERSsRIEND
Biuttlaia
,A i mmd a Cl
MWPntLP nrr.uLATO co, dot ga, atlwta. c
'a 'Mi V
r 1 ' :Mm si
t - It V
ee..
GnuarsiiniiL
For Summer at JAS. H. FARLEY
ON CKEBUT
Jas. H. Farley Outfits Man, Woman and Child on Small Week
ly Payments While Wearing -
A small payment down will secure the delivery of any garment and the balance may. be paid in small weekly or
monthly payments. Nol one penny is charged extra for the, Credit Prixilege our prices ares as low and in most
cases lower than those asked by the exclusive cash stores.
Smartly Tailored Suits for Ladies
$2
7 to $89
.50
Fancy and plain tailored models that are sure to please'
IjJ the most critical wearer, in serges, tricotines and gabar
ijl dines. Jersey Sport Suits in abundance. 'Select yours
m now and PAY THE EASY WAY.
SILK DRESSES
Galore
$19.98 to $59.50
: Materials of taffeta, geor
gette and satin, -neatly de
signed in short and long
sleeve models in a wonder
ful array of colors and trimmings.
SPRING COATS
Moderately Priced
Truly 'an immense showing.-
Even the cash stores
are wondering how we can
sell them at such low prices
and on credit too.
$14.98 to $37.50
Make a comparison and see for yourself.
Men's ahd Young Men's Fine Suits
$27.50 to $75
Models of snap and vigor for young men and plenty of
conservative ones for daddy. Fabrics of the newest tex
tures and colors durable, and at prices to suit every purse.
EASY PAYMENTS.
BOYS' SUITS
Wonderful Assortment.
$10 to $20
Bring your boy to Jas. H.
Farley's for his Spring Suit
and save money. Sturdy
suits, tailored for hard wear.
Serges and. fancy, mixtures.
Sizes 7 to 18 years. V v -
STYLISH MEN'S HATS
Splendid Values.
' $4 to $80
The showing is complete.
Every desirable - shape and
color ..for spring wear, pre
dominates. :The prices ire
lower than you win be asked
in' the cash stores. V for an
equal value.
COMPLETE SHOWING SUMMER SHIRTS, NECKWEAR, HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR and FOOTWEAR
r
IV
a . )
. ,.
' ' -v.
222 SOUTH JUIN ST.
1
(c3
v 1 -1 1 1
1 I - Vi
c. .a -iLJs
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mm
SALISBURY, N. C.