Newspapers / Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.) / July 13, 1916, edition 1 / Page 6
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CALOMEL IS MERCURY! IT SICKENS! ACTS ON LIVER LIKE DYNAMITE "Dodson’s Liver Tone” Starts Your Liver Better Tlian Caiomei and Doesn't Saiivate or Mal(e You Siolii Listen to me! Take no more sick- eninff, salivating calomel when bilious or constipated. Don’t lose a day’s work! Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it conies into cont^t with sour bile crashes into it, breakmg it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you are slug gish and "all knocked out,” if your liver is torpid and bowels constipated or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour just take a spoonful of harmless Dod- fion^s Liver Tone on my guaxantee. Here’s my guarantee—Gk) to any drug store and get a 50 cent bottle of Dod son’s Liver Tone. Take a spoonful to night and if it doesn’t straighten you right up and make you feel fine and vigorous by morning I want you to go back to the store and get your mon^. Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying, the sale of calomd because it is real liver medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore it can not salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod son’s Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your bowels of that sour bile and constipated waste which is clogging your syst«n and mak ing you feel miserable. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Twie will keep your entire family feeling fine for months. Give it to your children. It is harmless; doesn^t gripe Mid they, like its pleasant taste. ^AAAAAA•AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA WHAT IS THE USE OF REAPING A HARVEST UNLESS YOU ^ REAP A “RESULT” FROM YOUR HARVEST. BEING CAREFUL ► IN GROWING YOUR CROP WILL NOT BENEFIT YOU UNLESS ^ YOU ARE “CAREFUL” WITH YOUR MONEY WHEN YOU GET ► YOUR MONEY. REGULARLY BANKING THE MONEY YOU EARN FROM YOUR WORK, OR IN YOUR BUSINESS, IS THE ONE SURE WAY OF GROWING A FORTUNE. TRY IT. BANK WITH US. WE PAY H PER CENT INTEREST. MERCHANTS & FARMERS BANK MARION, NORTH CAROLINA. ^ Attractive Vacation Trips This Summer VIA Southern Railway Let us tell you about our popular excursions to the Seashore and MountaiD Resorts during July and Au^fust. Greatly reduced round trip fares to Atlantic City, Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Morehead City, Wrightsville Beach and Richmond. Asheville, Hendersonville, Waynesville, Black Mountain, Lake Toxa- way and many other resorts in the “Land of the Sky” Western North Carolina. Convenient Schedules. Excellent Train Service. Through Sleeping and Parlor Cars. Complete information and details v^ill be gladly furnished on ap plication, by, R. R. DeButts, Division Passenger Agent, Charlotte, N. C. Mexico. Oiarlotte Observer. At the present time and for days to come Mexico will be a subject of vital interest to the average Ameri can home and information about the country to which our soldiers are going will be eagerly sought and discussed. Our people know in a general way that Mexico is a country of desert and cactus, of heat and of sand storms, a country abounding in conditions of hard ships to an invading army, and those who hold to the idea that war with Mexico means play, may as well be now undeceived. There can be no doubt of the issue of the struggle. The United States will be the conquerer, but the cost is going to be heavy. The. line di viding the United States from Mexico is nearly 2,000 miles long. It separates four American border States from five Mexican border States and one territory. There are 250 “markers” for the bound ary, line, Mexico and the United States having jointly contributed to the cost. The markers are six feet tall, are of cast iron and set in cement. They cost $150 each. The soldiers are going to encounter blistering heat by day and chilling air by night. There will be deserts to cross and mountains to scale. Our troops are going into country that will try their mettle. There are many hardships that they can not hope to avoid, but one good thing which could be wished for them would be few experiences with the desert sand storm. The Observer finds an entertaining ac count in a letter by the National Geographical Society of an en counter with a sand storm in a valley west of the Pozo Verde Mountains, 200 miles east of the Colorado River, by the surveying party which erected the markers. They described the storm as one which in severity rivals the torrid tempests of the Sahara Desert. Reporting their experience the members of the party said that about 4 o’clock in the afternoon a dense, dark-brown cloud was seen rising in the south, which present ed a singularity threatening appear ance. The sun, which until then had been shining brightly, was soon overcast, and in a few mo ments after cloud was first noticed the storm burst in all its fury, filling the atmosphere to a height of several hundred feet with the loose soil of the valley. In ten or fifteen minutes after the storm burst it became as black as mid night, respiration was almost im possible, and it was only by breath ing through a handkerchief held in front of the mouth that suffoca tion was avoided. In about half an hour the wind began to subside and the darkness to diminish, and finally, in a little over two hours after the storm commenced, the setting sun shone faintly through the particles of dust which filled the air. 21,071,076 Fit For War. Washington, July 4.—From in formation that has been gathered by the Census Bureau the United States has 21,071,076 men between the ages of 18 and 45 years—men who are regarded as fit for fighting in time of war. Of this number 6,006,139 are in the Southern States, 13,094,615 in the North and 1,970,322 in the West. North Carolina has 401,917 and South Carolina 283,490. Texas has the largest number of the Southern States, 828,756. SOLD BY MARION LIGHT & POWER CO $5.50 auid up. If you know anything let us find it out. ’Phone, write, telegraph or do anything, just so you let us have it. That’s what we’re here for. Send in news items as early in the week as possible. Pocket Cutlery o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ 0 ♦ 1 0 ♦ 1 o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ o ♦ O A ♦ O o^o^o#o^o«o#o«o#o«o«o^o^o#o«o«o#o«o«o^o#o«o«o^o#o#o« Complete line of Pocket Cut lery memuf actured by The Robe son Cutlery Co., makers of re liable cutlery. Also carry good assortment of Table Cutlery, Scissors, Reizors, and Reizor Straps. You will find any mercnandise I sell well worth the price. \ J. D. Blanton, Marion, N. C. lo#o#o^o#o#o ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ Q o ♦ 0 ♦ o 0 1 o ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ 0 ♦ o . ♦ o ♦ 0 ♦ 0 You Need a Tonic There are times in every woman’s life when she needs a tonic to help her over the hard places. When that time comes to you, you know what tonic to take—Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui is com posed of purely vegetable ingredients, which act gently, yet surely, on the weakened womanly organs, and helps build them back to strength and health. It has benefited thousands and thousands of weak, ailing women in its past half century of wonderful success, and it will do the same for you. You can’t make a mistake in taking CARDUI The Woman’s Tonic Miss Amelia Wilson, R. F. D. No. 4, Alma, Ark., says: “I think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth, for women. Before I began to take Cardui, I was so weak and nervous, and had such awful dizzy spells and a poor appetite. Now I feel as well and as strong as I ever did, and can eat most anything.’* Begin taking Cardui today. Sold by all dealers. Has Helped Thousands. Young Nan, Don’t Scatter Your Dollars! YOUTH IS PHODIGAL. Preqnently the young man DOESN’T KNOW THE VALUE OF A DOLLAE. YOUTH IS NOT EVERLASTING. The big men of the conntry laid the foundation for their success by opening a bank acconnt when they were y»ung. If You Hope to Amount to Anythin^f Don’t Delay Starting a Bank Account. Start It Today. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Resources Over $600,000.00 THE BANK THAT APPRECIATES YOUR BUSINESS
Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 13, 1916, edition 1
6
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