Newspapers / China Grove Record (Salisbury, … / March 9, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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CHINA- GR0,;vO, :, 'V; GOOD FRIEND iiii 1 wwMti.: Mmmmm. AT IIJlllRltf ifiUDF (ii Fflfj i iufr m rhwi r m vm 5--- ,7 --., v, Lady - Says Cardui ls and Tells What It Did for Her. Mt feasant,- Tenn. "As a girl X jras always ' well and hearty," says Mrs. M, B. Rail, of this place. 'I bare' always been accounted healthy. I never felt any trouble like . ; . weak ness, until I capie to the change of life. I -was about forty-five when that be gan. I think I would have died had I not found out what a good friend to women Cardui is. "I suffered .a great deal. I had a number of fainting spells, and . . . would be obliged to lie in bed a week; or two at a time. I nver liked to lie In bed because it interf ered so with, ray work. The swimming in my head was , nearly continuous. I could not stoop down it would make me so dizzy. I think I usedl Cardui off and on tar two or three years, using in that time about S or 10 bottles. I began to fee? the improvement In health before I had taken one bottle, but kept on tak ing it until I got in perfect health. "Had it not been for Cardui I know I would have been dead. . . Now lam 62 years old, and weigh about 175, and am in the most perfect health." Give Cardui ar trial for your troubles. It should do for you what it has done for thousands of others. Adv. i Hight Hear a Few. "Henry," said Mrs. T wobble, "I hope you won't tell any risque stories at the master plumbers' banquet to night." "Of course I won't my dear." "That's right. I'm proud of you, Henry." "But I dare say I will be able-to tell some corkers after I attend that ban quet." YOU MAY TRY CUTICURA FREE That's the Rule Free Samples to Any . one Aaywhere. We haveso much confidence In the wonderful soothing and healing proper ties of Cuticura Ointment for all skin troubles supplemented by hot baths with Cutlcura , Soap that we are ready to send samples on request. They are ideal for the toilet. Free sample each by mail with Book, Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L Boston. Sold everywhere. dv. Where It. Couldn't Be Seen. It .was a hot hummer day with that peculiar kind of heat common to the Atlantic1 slope. Five big, stout gentle men were going to the top of a New York 'building. The sweat was pour ing ! from their foreheads, and their handkerchiefs looked Jlke Coney Island bathing-suits, hung out vto dry. "I.wish there was a' beer saloon In ths eleva tor," remarked, one fat gentleman. Tes,,boy you pught to-have a keg of ; beer aboard" this elevator," chime'd In ; another. The boy looked at the five fat' men and then remarked; solemnly : a keg of beer In this elevator now." LIVER, B01 For sick headache, bad breath, -Sour Stomach and constipation. , . Get ' a 10-cent box now. -Na tMlds-how bAd your liver, stomach or bowels; ' how much your head aches; how miserable and - uncomfort able you. are from constipation indiges tion, bilionsness .and sluggish bowels you always jget 'the desired results with Cascarots. , Don't ,klet your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Caacarets to-night; put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nerv ousness sick, sour, gassy stomach, 1 backache and all . other distress; cleanse your Jnside organs of all the bile, rases and constipated matter which is producing the misery. i.A :10icent box nieansi health, happl neas and a clear head, fpr month No more days of gloom and . distress If you'will take 1 a Cascaret now and then; All stores sell Cascarets. Don't forget the children their' , litpe ln sides heed a cleansing, too,. Adv. ; , Net Far to Go. "Do you suppose this whole coun try will be mobilized In case of war?" ' "Why 5 riot? It is already 'automo- ibilized." -KLXtOt ItABEK A. GOOD TOiNlC 'Aad Drlva: Btalwte Oat t ittf 8ntoa. Tonr Oabk actsjike magic ; I hare gijnn tt to nmneron paople in my Driah -wka wn - vfleriag' with chilli, malaria and ferer. I tree-' ,. i , emmend it to tbOMiwho araQrrvmad la V. adof a food tonic" ReT. 8. Sirmafibwakl. . Bt. Stephen's Church Perth; Atnboy If. ESlxl Dabek 50-eenta, all dninliti or b pareels Post, prepaid, from KIocaeweM Oo : : Cupid makes a mistake when he vf grafta.a bhd on an old shrub. - -' "CfiSGABETS" FOR 15 Or- THE PRESIDENT REfiBVS HIS CONSECRATES I N A G U p A.T I O N WITH MESSAGE OF HOPE FOR PEACE. Washington. Woodrow Wilson, with the major part of the world at war, and America poised on its verge, c?n?CTated his.secqnd inaguratiop as President nf the United States with a message of h6pe for peace. !J Standing in shadows1 of the Na tion's ; Capitol, with, his . face - turned toward the Eastern war-seared skips, ; the President renewed his oath of al legiance ? to 1 the Constitution praying to Almighty-God that he might be! given wisdom and prudence, to do his, duty in the true spirit of the Ameri-j can people. Washington. President Wilson's; inaugural address was as follows: "My fellow citizens: The four, years which have elapsed since I stood in this place have been crowded with counsel and action of the most vital interest and consequence. Perhaps no equal period in our history has been bo fruitful of important reforms in our; economic and industrial life or so full of significant changes in the spirit and purpose of our political action. We have sought very thoughtfully to set our house in order, correct the gros ser errors and abuses of our indus trial life, liberate and quicken the processes of our national genius and energy, and lift our politics to a broad er view of the people's essential in terests. It is a record of singular variety and singular distinction. But I shall not attempt to review it. It speaks for itself and will be of increas infig influence as the years go by. This Is not the time for retrospect. It is time rather, to speak our thoughts and purposes concerning the present and the immediate future.. "Although-we have 'centered counsel and action with such unusual concen tration and success upon the great problems of domestic legislation to which we addressed ourselves four years ago, other matters have more and more forced .themselves upon our attention, matters lying outside our own life as a nation and over which we had no control, but which, de spite our wish to keep free of them, have drawn us more and more irresis tibly into their own current and influ ence. "It has been impossible to avoid them They have affected the life of the whole world. They have shak en men everywhere with a passion and an apprehension that they never knew before. It has been hard to preserve calm counsel while the thought of our own people swayed this way and that under their influence. We are a com posite and cosmopolitan people. We are of the blood of all the nations that are at war. The currents of our thoughts as well as the currents of our . trade ran quick at all seasons back and forth between us and them. The war inevitably set its mark from the first alike upon our minds, our industries; our commerce, our policies, and our social action. To be independ ent of it was out of the question. "And yet all the while we have been conscious that we were not part of It. In that consciousness, despite many divisions, we have drawn closer to gether. We have been deeply wronged on the seas, but we have not wished to wrong. or injure in return; have re tained throughout the consciousness of. standing in some sort apart, intent upon an interest that transcended the in mediate issues of the war Itself. As come of the injuries done us have, be come intolerable, we have still been clear that we wished nothing for our selves that we were not ready to de mand for all mankind fair dealing, justice, the freedom to live and to be at ease against organized wrong. "It is in this spirit and with this thought that we have grown more and more aware, more and" more certain that the part we wished to play was the part of those who mean to vindi cate and fortify peace.' We have been otliged to arm ourselves to make good our claim to a certain minimum of right and Of freedom of action.- We stand firm in armed" neutrality since it seems that in no other way we cjaa demonstrate what It Is we insist upbn and can sot forego. ; We may even (be drawn on, by circumstances, not Jby own . purpose or d Uire, to a more active assertion of our rights as we see them and a more immediate asso ciation wijh the great struggle itself, But nothing will alteu our thought i or our purpose. They are too. clear to be obscured. They are too deeply rotted in t the principles of bur pa tiQal ljfe to bei jaltered;: We desire neite"cbi 3 wish nothing that can be Tha dh onljr at the cost of another people. We.hav ilways professed unselfish purpose and w covet the opportunity to prova that our profession are sincere. ; v ALLEGIANCE TQCOHSTiTUTIOrj "There are many things Stat to do at home, to clarify our own policies and give new vitally to the industrial processes of pur own life, and we shall do them . as time and opportunity server but we realibe that the greate3t things that remain to be done must be done with the whole world for a stage and in co-operation with the wide and universal forces of mankind, and we are taking our spirits ready for those things. They will follow in the immediate wake of the war itself and will set civilization up again, we aro provincials no longer. The tragical events of the thirty months of vital turmoil through which we have just passed have made us citizens of the world. There can be no turning back. Our own fortunes as a nation are in vplved, whether we 'would have it so or not. "And yet we are riot the less Amer icans on that account. We' shall , be the more American if we but remain true to, the principles in which" we have been bred. The"y are not the principles of a province or of a single continent. We have known and boast ed all along that they were the prin ciples of a liberated mankind. These, therefore, are the things we shall stand for, whether in war on in peace. "That all nations are equally inter ested in the peace of the world and in the political stability of free peoples, and equally responsible for their main tenance;. "That the essential principle of peace is the actual equality of na tions in all matters of right or privi lege; "That peace can not securely or justly rest upon an armed balance of power; "That governments derive all their just powers from the Consent of the governed and that no other powers should be supported by the common thought, purpose, or power of the fam ily of nations. "That the seas should be equally free and safe for the use of all peoples, under rules set up by common agree ment and consent, and that, so far as practicable, they should be accessible to all upon equal terms;. "That national armaments should be limited to the necessities, of national order and domestic safety; "That the community of interest and power upon which peace must hence forth depend imposes upon each na tion the duty of seeing to it that all influences proceeding from its own citizens meant to encourage or assist revolution In other states should be sternly and effectually suppressed and prevented. "I need not argue these principles to you. my fellow countrymen. They are your own, part and parcel: of your own thinking and our fwiL motive in affairs. They spring up native amongst, us. Upon this as a platform of our purpose and action, we can stand to gether. "And it is imperative that we should stand together! We are being forced into a new unity amidst the fires that now blaze throughout the world. In their ardent heat we shall, in God's providence, let us hope, be purged of faction and division, purified of ths errant humors of party, of private in terest, and shall stand for the days to come with a new dignity of national pride and spirit. Let each man see to it that the dedication is in his own heart, the high purpose of the nation in his own mind, ruler of his own will aifd desire. "I stand here and have taken the high and solemn oath to which you have been audience because the peo ple of the United States have chosen me for this august. delegation of pow er and have by their gracious judg ment named me leader in affairs. I know now what the task means. I realize to the full the responsibility which it involves. I pray God I may he' given the wisdom and the prudence to do my duty in the true spirit of this great people. I am their servant and can succeed only as they sustain and guide me by their confidence and their counsel. The thing I shall count upon, the thing without which neither coun sel nor action' will avail, is the unity o America an America united in feel ing, in purpose, and in its vision cf duty, of opportunity, and of service. We are to &oware of all men who would turn the tasks and the neces sities of the -nation to their own . pri vate profit or use them for the build ing up of private power; beware that no faction or disloyal Intrigue break the" harmony or embarrass the spirit of. our people; beware that our gov ernment be kept pure and incorrupt In all its parts. United alike in the con ception of our duty and in the high resolve to perform it in the face At all men, let us dedicate ourselves to the great task to which we inust now set our hand. For myself, I beg your tol erance, your countenance, ana your united aid. The 'shadows , that now He dark upon our path will soon be dis polled and we shall walk ' with , the light all about us if we be but true to ourselves to ourselves .as we have wished to be knovn in the counsels of the world and iz the thought of all those who love liberty, - ju 'tlct and the right exalted.- KHAKI BRONZED GUARDSMEN, JUST HPME FROM ; BORDER GUARD LINE. PRESIDENT AND MRS. U RIDE 111 JJ-OPEN CARRIAGE Long Line of Military Organizations, Guardsmen, Sailors, Cadets, Veter ans, Governors, Women and Civil ians Maks Up the Inaugural Parade. Washington. The mighty proces sion wMch marked President. Wilson' aec9mii 'inumjuration marched with wind-whipped ags over Pennsylvania avenue frbrii the Capitol to the White House j between s open lines , of khaki, brone4 guardsmen frosv New . York, home from service on the border, tt was the first time since the Inaugura tion of Lincoln in 2861 that troops iad guarded the line of marchv . Despite the. wind and lowering clouds, which early in the day dark ened the city with threats of a con tinuation of the downpour, almost every foot of vantage spape along the mile-long way, was occupied, and the great reviewing stands windows, bal conies and housetops held thousands more. The crowd waited patiently behind the stout steel cables stretching from the White House to the Capitol, hun dreds of early comers being in posi tion at 7 o'clock, four hours before the Presideat and his party left the White House. Ten hours later, when the last of the marchers was nearing the reviewing stand, the line still held. Presidential Party. President Wilson and his escort, Squadron B of the Second Cavalry, left the White House at 11 o'clock, the President and Mrs. Wilson riding in an open carriage drawn by four horses, preceded by mounted police and cavalry and flanked by secret service men. The Vice President fol lowed in another carriage, with his smart-looking escort of cadets from Culver Military Academy, mounted on black' horses. As the procession left the Court of Honor, opposite the White House, the cavalry formed a hollow square, with the President's carriage in the cen ter. It was shortly after 1 o'clock when the inaugural parade started up the avenue, the President and his es cort leading. Meantime the sun nad come out, drying the sand sprinkled over the way. ' The line moved slowly between two New York regiments the Twelfth and the Sixty-ninth stand ing, at attention. They wer the visi ble, evidence of elaborate steps taken to insure the President's safety. With bands blaring many tunes and flags Whipping, the parade got under way a long line of brilliant color. First came the West Point cadets, overcoated, a marching mass of gray and white whose clock-like move ments were as of one man. They were followed by the Annapolis ca dets, 1,200 strong, wearing their deep blue overcoats. 9 Military Organizations. Then came the long line of military organizations, guardsmen, sailor3, coast artillerymen and cadet schools ; which formed the first and second divisions, under command of Major General Tasker H. Bliss and Brig. Gen. Williams A. Mann. As the head of the line reached the Court of Hon 01 the marchers stopped and remain ed at attention for 20 minutes while the President prepared to take the place in the reviewing stand. A bugle gave the signal, and the long line moved again. The inaugu ral parade was on, with the Presi dent standing where Presidents long have stood on inauguration day to re view the marchers. For nearly tour hours they filed past sailors, soldiers, guardsmen, cadets, veterans, Gover nors and their staffs, thousands of civilians In civic and political organi zations, Indians here and there, a line of women, and hundreds of brass bands. The crowds in the reviewing stand and on the streets were; chilled by the wind. The paraders marched stoutly in the face of it. In sudden gusts, it picked up the : sand and blinded them, swept their colors from their grasp and sent their hati high in the air. . At times, whole organizations had to halt while a particularly severe guest sent its. force, musicians had to empty the sand from their instru ments in the midst of playing and color-bearers by the hundred had to furl their colors. But the crowd was more orderly than usual; and the pa raders took it all in good part. It was ' after 5 o'clock ywhen the parade ended. Pennsylvania avenue no longer looked iti customary spick and span cleanliness. Instead, It re sembled a dusty road, with the wind whirling -the dust and the litter of .torn papers into the spirals. Just Once! Try "Godson's Liver Tone" When Bilious,' Cohsth Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel fine and cheerful; make your work a pleasure; be' vigorous and fun of am bition. - But aka lianiaty. danger ous calomel, because it makes you sick and yon may' lose a day's work. Calomel is mercuryor quicksilver, which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel crashes into sour, bile .like dynamite, breaking it up. That's when you feel' that awful nausea and cramping. Listen to me!. If you want to enjoy the . nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing , yon ever experienced Just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson'a Liver Tone. Tour druggist or dealer sella, yon a BO cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tope under my personal money- The Game Keeper. . It was the morning after the night before and he was not in bed Teaching for a pitcher of ice water.. He was behind the bars of the city prison and;he;gaze4 outside with a woeful look in his eyes. "Hey, there," he shouted, as he grabbed, the bars. "I want to see the game keeper. v "What do yi think ylu are?" asked the turnkey. "This is not a zoo; It's the city prison,- as you will find out be fore you get Out." THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DAtlDRUFF Qirls! Beautify Your Hair! Make Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant Try tha Moist Cloth. It Try as you. vflll, after an application of Danderlne, frou cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most, will be after a few weeks use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first yesi but real ly new hair" growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No differ ence how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a Cloth with Danderine and carefully draw It through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect Is im mediate and amazing your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance ; an incom parable luster, softness and luxuri ance, the beauty and shimmer of true : hair health. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knbwlton's Danderine from any store and prove that your hair is as pretty and soft as any that It has been neglected or injured by careless treatment that's all. Adv. Much Worse. "No doubt you have often been wearied by two men bragging about the merits of their respective time pieces?" "Oh, yes. That's a common failing, .1 believe." "But my sense of ennui at a time like that is as nothing compared to the way I feel when one of my neigh bors begins 'to boast about the amount of heat given out by his marvelous furnace from a single shovelful of coal." PAIN? NOT A BIT ! LIFT YOUR CORNS OR CALLUSES OFF No. humbug! Apply few drops then Just lift them away with fingers. This new drug is an ether compound discovered by a Cincinnati chemist. It is called freezone,-and can now be obtained in tiny bottles as here .shown at very little cost from any drug store. Just ask for freezone. Apply a drop or two directly upon a tender corn or callus and instant ly the soreness disappears. Shortly you will find the corn or callus so loose that you can lift It off, root and all, .with the fingers. Not a twinge of pain. soreness or irritation; not even the slightest ing, 'either when applying freezone or afterwards. .. This drug doesn't eat up the corn or callus, but shrivels them so they loos en and come right out. Is no humbug I ; It works like a charm. For. a few- cents ybu can ret rid of ev ery hard corn, soft corn or corn between the toes, as well as pain ful-calluses on bottom of vonr feet. Tt never disappoints and never burns. "bites, ox inflames. If your druggist hasn't anv rreezone vet. tell nlm get a little bottle for1 . you "from his wholesale house. adv. - Wise Is the chap .who catches on at the proper: time and; lets go at the SI back guarantee that ' each ' spoonful will clean your sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that '. it wont make Ton sick. ; Dodson's Ltver Tone' la real .liver medicine. Toull know 1 ziext morn ing,; because - yon will wake up feel- , lng fine,' your liver .win bo working, your headache, and dizziness gone, your stomach win be sweet and your bowels regular. . . Dodson's Liver ' Tone ' ' Is entirely vegetable, , therefore harmless and cannot salivate. Give it to your, chil dren. Millions of people are using Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dan gerous calomel now.' Tour druggist will tell you that the sale of calomel Is almost stopped entirely here. Adv. Explanation. "James, what Is the meaning of this they call the Pan-American policy?" "Just like a woman's stupidity to ask such a question. Americans are getting panned all. right, ain't they?"- After 10 Years of Suffering, Show Man Finds Relief in Tettertne. T have been troubled with a screr case of Tetter for ten years. In Colum -SJA.??1 a drusit recommended Tettertne. I bousht a box: it rare mm relief, so I bousht another and am en tlrly well," . Iw, Wren. CWcafo. ?e cot Ecsema, Tetter. Itchlnr Pllesi RIm Worm md every form of. 5ai?.and 8kl Disease.' Tettertne 50c; Tet.rin Soap 23c. Your drugirist, or by mau from the manufacturer. - The Shup trlne Co.. Savannah. Oa. , With every mall order for Tettertne wo 1 five a box of Bhuptrine's lOo Liver Plus free. Adv. Every square mile of the Bea is es-i timated to contain 120.000,000 fish. When a little man wants to make an Impression he wears a silk hat. Yager's Liniment is excel lent for any. kind .of pain or congestion. It quickly re lieves backache and rheu matic pains, and is a splen did remedy . for . Neuralgia,. - Sciatica, chest pains, sprains, strains, swellings and en largements. Keep s bottle la your home for emergence you never can tell when you will require something of the sort. The 25 cent bottle of YaeerV Liniment contains four tames aa much as the usual botila of lini ment sold for that prica. AT ALL DEALERS . GILBERT BROS. & CO. BALTIMORE. MD. - wmamk r Have you RHEUlYIATIGiY Lumbago or Gout? - TaseBaKUltACIDic to restore tke anA art ye ike souon from lb mini At irr inrisu Jm. Befly 4 Sea, Wtelesel DutrlWtsrs FrostProof Cabbage Plants April 1st tfaUverr VarUtls's, Barlr Jersey a4 Charlesto Wakefield: Bneeesclon and rlat Date. K tor sUt, LKtt tot CLOO, st tLW. . U B. sere! Tomato Plants UvtBffvton Beautr , JBarUnanaer ana Stone, SOB f of ' We, lJSw for fXtt, IjOW at fXJb, sosmmUI tteper IMi f. 0. here. Pepper Plants Eg Plants MefortLDO, UOO for tUO, MOO mgLtt, postpaid tat J Sweet Potato Plants UoiXOB at tlJS Pr 1 JD00, 10J00 tip U itr fUBDO. T. a&km Dm w Jamison. SanamervlUe, 8. O All ICkU Blp to eradloat 4aSdr& rssPssliaiM rnlnr PeaU toGrtycf FmU4 Hair. r E KODAKS c SUPPLIES' We also do sJrhest elaaa of flsJablsg-. Prieea and Catatocuo upon request.' S. GakaU Optkal Ca., Firteisss, Vs. CANE SEED, $8i iZJSXi Peas. Oottsa Seed, Seed Bmax Sad. Bd Potato do r. 6: Baaanei WHteasferprteeUss. SMy .S.C "noc:nc3ms,'fssj'1ai5a APPGwmmiris: tfyoe eva bn tarwst aor Save OA. IXSTOarsS, wnoK.eAS or B&in ! iiibence aid wrlta I ar valaaal Book ef laforaauoa r M K K . i tSfmJL '"' v Li s psychological moment. . - W. N. U CHARLOTTE, NO. 10-1117 K I0 -v - ' -, i
China Grove Record (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 9, 1917, edition 1
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