Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / July 1, 1924, edition 1 / Page 16
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After Years Of Suffering Wiil Browning, Pattonburg, Mo.) says, 'Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets cured my wife of seri ous bilious attacks and constipation from which she had suffered for years." So easy to take, so plea* sant in effect, and so small a cost, only 25c. —The problems 6? civilization will never be solved until everybody is satisfied with a little less money. —Sudan grass can be grown on a sandy loam if it is well drained and fairly fertile. It is used as a summer pasture crop. It should not besown with sweet clover because they do not belong together. Tobacco Fines Flue Repairs, Lime, Cement Fine and Cedar Shingles Galvanized Roofing, Glass Fruit Jars Tin Fruit Cans, Extra can and jar tops Reach Baseballs, Mitts and Gloves Louisville Slugger Bats Hbrse Muzzles, Hose and Hoe Handles Lawn Hose, Sprinkling Fots Spray Pumps, Lanterns and Lantern Globes Tobacco Twine Pressed Lumber, Plaster and Lathes Watkins Hardware Co., inc. HENDERSON, N. C. Plaster, Lime Cement and Lumber It s TTIte; Work Test That Counts When buying Har- j ness be sure that 1 you get the kind j that has been tested ^ by real work. That's the kind we seli. Pete Buttock SEABOARD A!R L!NE RY. OFFERS Attractive Summer Rates Specia! Excursion Fares to Niagara Faiis and Atlantic City Sold only on certain dates during June, July, Au gust and September, with tinal limit, 18 days. Fares from Raleigh to Niagara Falls and return, $26.70; to Atlantic City and return, $16.85. IXtCRSlON FARES from Raleigh to San Fran crsco and Eos Angeles, California and return, going via one route and returning another, $129.22. To Norfolk-Forts HtuH. 310.10; to Virginia Beach, $10.90, and LOW FARES in effect from other st.. trons m North Carolma to the above points. For detailed in JOHN T. WEST Division Passenger Agent RAEEIGH, N. C. Publisher Took * Democrats to N. Y. ^ . - Herbert Bayard 8wope, Executive Editor of the New York IforM, ia the man who first got the idea of landing the Democratic L National Convention in New York this year. He foUowed through to the finish and for the first time since 1868, New Yor^) is being thriHed with a national con* vention/---* * ! S-C-R-A-P-S —President Coolidge is going to spend the summer in Washington, which wiil be a vacation for him, with Congress adjourned. —Science has figured out a way to apply radio to surgery and cut off iegs with it. The iarge majority of radio sounds that way. —Revenue to the government means income, to the taxpayer outgo and to the congressmen a lot of dam aged fences. —Farmers should prepare to fight the destructive watermelon diseases which seem sure to be with us this season. Where farmers fail to make the right kind of a start, there is no hope for their crop. —The arbitration society is an or ganization in New York that settles the legal controversies of its mem bers by means of a public tribunal. Two business men who are con fronted with the prospect of a long an dexpensive lawsuit often find it more satisfactory to join the society and have their case settled quickly by expert opinion. It is not a money making court, which would be against the law, but simply an arbi tration society ru nfofr the conve nience of its members. —The American Museum of Nat ural History has placed on exhibition a shell known as the gloria maris, or j glory of the sea, which is perhaps the rarest, and which is certainly one of ! the most beautiful, of all sea shells, jit is about five inches long, a slender ! cone the prevailing shade of which I is ivory, though in pertaia lights it has a pinkish lustre like a pearl. On the iory background appear a spiral band of glowing orange and a fret j work of geometrical figures the sides of which vary from an eighth of an ! inch to an almost microscopic length. No specimen of the gloria maris is known to have been found since 1838. —A home for aged people who have been rich and accustomed to the refinements of living, but who have been reduced to poverty ,is soon to be opened in New York City. It is said to be as comfortable and as beautiful as the best hotels. The trusetes make it plain that they can not receive anyone who has been merely well-to-do at some time or other; they particularly want old couples who have always been used to every luxury and for that rea son find poverty in old age doubly hard to bear. A worthy charity, no %6ubt; but how sardonic that provi sions must seem to couples who are now poor enugh to get in, but who have never been rich enough It! is going to exclude a lot of us. CALOMEL IS A DANGEROUS DRUG Next Dose may Salivate You, Loosen Teeth or Start Rheumatism. Calomel is mercury; quicksilver. It crashes into sour bile like dyna mite, cramping and sickeneing you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your system. If you feel bilious, headachy, con stipated and all knocked eut, just go to your druggist and get a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents which is a harmless vegetable sub stitute for dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't start your liver and straighten you up bet ter than nasty calomel and without making you sick, you just go back and get your money. Don't take calomel! It makes you sick the next day; it loses you a day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens you right up and you feel great. No salts necessary. Give it to the children because it is per fectly harmless and can not sali T*'*. („ T!RES and TUBES Goodyear Prices deduced Lower Than Ever! REGULAR REP/ME PRICES— "**" CLINCHER FABRIC CLINCHER com, 30x3 . .$7.00 $8.50 $10.70 30x3%. 8.00 9.95 12.15 31x4 17.35 STRAIHHT-SIDE FABRIC 30x3%. 13.50 32x3%. 16.35 31x4 . 17.85 32x4. 19.65 33x4 . 20.30 34x4 . 20.95 29x4%. 32x4%. 26.30 33x4%. 34x4%. 27.55 35x4% 36x4% 30x5 . 33x5 . 35x5 37x5 . 8.95 11.35 14.05 STRAIGHT 11.35 13.50 15.50 13.20 16.35 18.15 14.20 17.85 20.45 15.65 19.05 22.50 16.45 20.30 23.20 17.05 20.95 23.95 23.70 27.10 28.30 29.20 26.95 29.95 27.55 30.65 31.45 32.20 30.55 34.55 . 33.65 37.35 35.30 39.20 41.20 2.15 1.55 2-00 2.50 1.75 l( 2-90 3.50 2.25 2.00 2.50 3.57 2.35 2.90 2.20 2.90 3.50 2.25 3.00 3.60 2.30 3.10 3.65 2.35 3.15 3.85 3.90 4.15 4.25 4.40 4.50 4.65 4.90 5.60 5.75 6.10 GranviHe Motor Co. and Fitting Station Wi!!iamsboro Street Oxford, N. C. Cat the Tonic of the Out oS Doors The Touring Car R O. B. Detroit Demountabie Rim* and Starter $SS t^tra Be sure that #our efficiency and j/our comfort this summer have the help of that car you have always intended to buy. You know its Value—you know what an essential aid it is to a fuller activity, an easier life, more healthful hours out-of-doors. Delay invites disappointment. Why wait? Buy nou?/ AM /. a. h. DWai( EEE THE MEAHEST AUTHOEtZED EOED DEALEE Cooper Motor
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1924, edition 1
16
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