Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Oct. 1, 1925, edition 1 / Page 8
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Had L?t AH Hope of Erer BdagWell Road story of the fight f or health and victory aa toU by Mr*, hnw A. Hall, Box 31, Nor. ris City, Illinois, "About twelve years ago my hc.tlth railed. I could not eat any thing without suffering. I had heartburn, sour stomach, palpita tion of the heart, smothering spells, pains in my back and sides and a cough almost like consumption. Kothn.g helped me. I grew worse and was able to sit up only part of the time. I had lo.->t all hope of ever being any better when someone gave me a Pe-ru-na book.*" The book described my ease so tru'y that I began to take Fe-ru-.ia. After two and a halt battles I could eat with out suffering and improved from then on. I took eight bottles and .fe.lv like a new person. That was fourteen years ago. So many dis eases arc clue to catarrh that I think Pe-ru-na the greatest family medicine in the world." For more than half a century Pe-ru-na has been doing just such wo:k as this. Send 4 cents postage to the PE-RU-NA COMPANY. Columbus, Ohio, for a booklet on catarrh. Pe-ru-na is for sale EVERYWHERE Tablets or Liquid Grow Hair on Your BALD HEAD bare-to-hair A Blessing to Mankind Paul Bonoi. Pit cairri Ave., iean n<?tte. Pa. . had Al opecia. which left htm without rrair oh any part gf his head. Used tout ' bottles of Bare-to Hair Now has a frill growth of hair as* shown cn the p-hoto. Bate-to: Hair will grow hair on bald heaA. Stop Falling Hair. Dandruff, itch ing. and many forms of Eczema. Corrftpowlfncr oenon*: iltfntw*. W. H. FORST, Mfg. SCOTTDALE. PA FOR OVER 200 YEARS hanriem oil has been a world wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. I HAARLEM OIL. correct internal troubles, stimulate vital ? crgar.s. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. Zi .<.? tvf.jn; . ?>: rt. A Household Remedy orf :"- Hs:r Ti-. W Any Snriv Hin- . opi}"- >; Myrrh p'rvvent' nft-ctioh tn>! jiu's. Thpv - all ;<6re?. ? -A<K'-. 'VliviV.-r> vwf??!V or:t:?*l7.jn-i.-' ? n .V.i Child's Harmless Laxative is "California Fig Syrup" ErVto if rro>s. feverish, bilious, oon siifrtited -?r foil !>f ? oid: children love ?he pleasant taste of "California t'ig Syrup." A r^isiwMUjfiil never fails to gently '.lean the liver and Dowels and V -sweeten the stoMiacfi. Ask your druggist for irenuine "Cali fornia Fiir Svntp" which has directions ,-fcr ha hies and children of . all ages - printed on bottle. Mother! You must say Talifornia" or you may get an imitation ftg syrup. CKIN IRRITATIONS ^ For their immediate relief and j healing doctors prescribe Resinoll CIRL HAD RETAINED PROBLEM IN MIND Educator Tells of Remark able Feat of Memory . A western editor. college professor and publicist, shaking of remarkable memories that he had .observed, says : "I've known some good memories. One was that of a western congress man who knows fifty thousand people in his home state and can recall every meeting with every man. I have heard Blind Tom and Blind Boone, musical prodigies who could reproduce the most difficult composition played in their hearing. I've known AI Hicks, the Montana stock inspector, who knew six hundred stock brands, their owners, their rairge and every vent anil r>>ad brand, they had ever used. But I think the most remarkable mem ory feat was that of a negro girl stu i lent in a high school where 1 once taught. "I had a class in advanced algebra. ; and in the textbook was a long list of problems on which we worked for weeks. For examination I assigned any two problems on a given page, eueh student to make choice for hlm self. '. . ' < >ne especially dirtr'.'tilf problem in three unknown quantities had re quired a whole blackboard for its so lution.- Only one boy. the class prodigy, had mastered. it. ' : Wlu'ti this negro girl, who wrote a beautiful hand but was particularly dense in mathematics, handed in a faultless solution of this hardest, prob lem. I couldn't see Ij.iw she could have done it. without cheating, i . '?!?:! r.-tn" I said, "why did you se- [ {Cef this one?". "BeeiMjse 1 ??oa'd do It best, sir," [ she ar?irtti?s|. J Tlfoir-li i ????if ln'f beiieye it. finally I said,', "well., .if. yo?| did . it onee. you ?-:ir? vl<? ft iigaiti. aor'eip ttiy ofi'ice.* ' I v. nt.'he ! Ji.er as >he wrote steadily, rapidly, wjth?ur erasures >>r hesita^j riott. Soon ivi ?!??>! nip. "the paper: T ' onbln't haVe don** i' any better, my self. 4 ? '?AV. i;. .-j-i-.il di and you g*i* your ?grade and' in- apology." I told her. 'But shrcly'you lidn'* work it out as you w.?Tit :?.!??!?<?*. ?'???':*?. I ?'No., >ir I ji.sf hvtb 'inhered, it." was j .!.:er yurprisiiig resp. aise . *? t'-Iieme-in J >?-r. 'i 1 It "Y.?v sir O. in > you remember that Harry: -TlUftehor wrote it -.n the board? Wei". <;r. I just. ? r.e.Meinb.ored it, anil then* it is "' ? ? Tllos.-. other prodigies wore, ''doing tiil things ;n whieli- t!;e\ w ere inter ested. w*i.t ? whi.'i! .they \V'er*' in lo^o. Bur ??fiis negro uirj. knovvitiif arid car iVS V ? ?! ' n g .'t M.d.hemnTies. had r.'-i:i>rrh?-te>s tiieiiio?'v/oi'i_ all -these -j >t rjiiigo ?:g?ifev and : ? ? i r in'-rleato r> ? ratjoj... ,??-?. ;?i j.v'Jti' ' : ? s.be' vWfts not in roresi. ! ; .Vrvi -t" my ifiitid Iter memory ' e;i t was ? t.':,rn -all rfie others , ... 'Youth's t o^iiilal'.iirh. . ' : j. Dancc of Summer lyini l.'.ru'.i' i ''$>?-% e'r l.e.tf fartn. ir|iiV: . . stiUmjier i?-/:.'?<ler>.- was.'b'ati- ?' -;ng oti : t ; ?,!i.'?-'- j.ilkiiig j 'v a l trrh\:i ij.i; . v. : ,.:ti oit ,n tl;e 'i'wa-loW Ik' .'!* ' -e : i ?> " a VoU?>g ia;'va. in :i tkiXjk^Brd ped' high -in'-: : Ui; a :.t< i; ? !??' .-.Vied- ;to- Mie. grr'tfli'ly i ? hiv.o.'lt ?>}-'?;! ? b.-iidin^ v.otsid ..?ra !-.!??- :r>n emem*. . vWltSi; . ??'?'v'rejse-i eartlv . his ' tybo.ut: : ? s . ? . i' .on. -like- ? ..in ex.'- t-iw-r. ? ie.-.j.i-d :uiV|. -ra-fi n.-M-: ' A io - e i tnli-.j'li. ? -.v.'ii' ition \v,::!i a Iwaijitijii dive ? 'V'*r ar-;- " e> it;}.. '.i<".n\e:v "l-IiN-cp'/ ?l:,;i vr:" asked the !ie?v ?; <?;ird.'r.:':"- . ?{: "N opt.:. . ''M!:. !e >.aj| Kzn: ?I':::c:e. K.-.n* . < "i"!;. S a>l Rapid "Well, hmv ar?- filings noing.oti here, tln-se .lays'" asked the p.ietare enlarg- . it who Visited '!:?.? !:a inlet xtiilieient.ly : ?often \4 '?e niibiiy m.twested in the liap|M>ning> ther - ??Bo??fa?ng.v s??*: booming !" trium phantly replied the landlord of Uie tyv- '! .?rti at 1'eewiJtHL'Uddyhunip. "FuUJ' three ?im?*s as taany. motor cars j>as.s through 1 here now 'd ivs as did last summer. | vve'v?,? got a ''"Uple of right lively di vorce suits going <>n at once, there are fully twice as' many prisoners in the jiiii .is this iiiue last ye;tr, and L'eacon I'ennypini-her Is actually talking about painting his "aou.se !" ? Kansas City Times. - ' His Interest "Six iittlv [uips were bortied at my place. Inst night." announced I.uni Dumrii "f Slippery Slap. "Cutest little tellers you ever laid your eyes on." "That so?" returned an ac<|uaint anee. "I ?idn't 1 he^ir something about a new baby at your house last night, too?"' ..." i .? ' "Come to^thix:k, I reckon you did." "Is it a boy. dr a girl?' "Why. I- -durne?l it' 1 thought to ask. I was -o in i 'rested in the ]>up^."- ? Kan sas City Sttir. T ? Diagnosis "My desir sir. what you need Is a eomplete rest." "But, doctor. I retired from business three years ago. and haven't doue auy work since." "Ah. then I have located the seat of the trouble, you must have some employment to keep your tuind occu pied!"? Judge. . Serious Business "Herio, dearie ? jitst dropped in tn ?".?e if. you wuiddn^t like to go shopping 'Villi iiiei" . : "Stirrv my dear Vjt. I can't? I sim ply must buy something today." ? Life. ?lT*l>ar?tl by th* National Gt'otjraehlc So ciety. Waahlngton. I?. C.) Southwest afkm'a, the intest political division of the world t<? acquire a constitution, waji for merly tlennan So*tf Invest fcfrioa. jthe product of the tirst of wer wnny's efforts to olitnln 11 co lonial "I'Uice in the sun." It was on this huge territorial "hone" that the empire, unused to overseas pos sessions, cut the teeth of its colonial policy, later used effectively in oilier parts of the world. Since the ^Yorld war the region has been under man date from the I'.eajjue "f Nations 'o tin' 1'nion of South Africa. The consti tution recently granted to the man dated territory was conferred hy the parliament of the union and Is only the forerunner. according to South African political leaders, of n still broader charter. Germany became interested in enl .inies in t!ie eighties of the Nineteenth century after most of the desirable i reus in Africa had been staked out by other European powers. Along the Atlantic coast. Southwest Africa (then^generally known as Painarn land) was practically the only unap propriated region between the Capp of 0??>d Hope and ?;ft>riilVijr; and 'Jrent r.ritain looked ui'on this region even is more or less , hazily within her sphere of influence. I'ndouhtedly it had remained unappropriated largely Sechuse of its. utterly desolate appear ance j'n lit. t he sea. S< ?? -i 11 c ? ?nly it > >ea aspect ?flie traveler- described it as without t|Ufsf i"n. "the least attractive part of Afrl -a. except only the Sa il. 'mi.** . , , f ?>?>?> Soutlrw est Africa has an area jim square, miles. and so i> two.thirds is larire as the four states of the union together,- ItWinnmc 'in. tlie smith at the t iTitJi-'e1 rivvr; it: -extends northward p:-sf the Tropic of Capricorn and on to the southern border of tin- L'^rtU colony of Anir-?.!:j. market] by the Ktineiie river. The total trontaue im , the Atlantic is approximately $?*> miles, a distance e<|ital to* that from the island of Jamaica to central Flori da and in corresponding latitudes. In the north the territory is <VJ(I miles wide, extending inland to within little more than' 1"" miles of the middle line of the continent. The territory be comes narrower to. tin* south, -and at i <he southern boundary is -inly ; tii i I ? ?? wide. The ne*st sTfiiiiuc and pe- | oilier feature of Southwest AfrH'a'-.ns : it appears on- a tiijip- ? the b'ti^ nar- . row 'Mincer" of territory that extends 'eastward'' Topi 'hi- northeast corner. < This corridor o:dy about mile's wide, > e'\te?jds' i'-r ?c: l'!\ 1 Hides {,. the 7an.)be/.i ii\er; whjcb ?i: ^reaches only a few mil. - a'"' e A'ict.-Via f;,p,s. Coasta: De&ert Is Desolate. '.Soiitlr.\e- St :. Africa's -w v>r.st. -f? ^ which , -he puis b-rwaril lothe Atlantic? the 1 Vvfts.tal. je.riert?is knoWTV. -as' the N.'i- i I,,;;., l'. w -o:.sl re_., .n- of Me- earth ( desolate';- Shallow water, j low ?!."ser! , daij'ls absence of bar 1 bor>. arid dr. vridv shore. devoid I et \a,_e!afi"iv., i'oi/itd',A'd tie tr.aktr Jl'v ; tvgion so' iniiospitabie ?o si.;|ijien -.that , t'hev alw: \s -av- it a ^ j berth 1 1f j s Mtosth Idievli into lllHles. eV , tr; :> ;r'. :i'i from i-ejr J<? fo.rtj t -ib.'s ..uvd t !.e ' biin en. d'e.ier? character of tjii's "strij.- is '!s.'!;Ued from the. southern boundary i'or about ?>"? ^ north. The few striata beds lh; t have beetl j worn iitto (Jie Na.aii. d'iririJ: the au-e< j have -Artier in thetn ?nly now. aiid,j then <tv..?r .1 b>n^ si;ric< of year*. "i;d wlleri uioisf.tre ilin-s i|oW down fr'C". the highlands it seldom reacucc ' V ? s^a. The northern "??<? miles of reiiion is only a little less desolate than the Namib. It is more- mountain- ( mis; less dj'tuinaled by loose saml. ami j in a more tropbral latitude. The stream beds are better defined and usually support a iirowth of hushes and trees. Perhaps oner in ten years the Na tuib re?,eiyes a -dri'ttehinc rain and ?leiiK'nst rates the masiie that nature hides in her drops of water, \e.rdure springs up all over the parched sands, animals flock In almost overnight, and 1 for a while the former desert teems j with tame. Soon, however, the sun pnrches lite soil again, the animals dis appear. and once more the desert Is supivino. From ten to forty miles inland the desert gives pliice to a transition belt. Sjiarse crass and buslies appear on rising ground and afford some pas turage. Immediately beyond is the escarpment of. the inland plateau. Its edge marked in many places by fan tastically piled bowlders. It is in the upland back of the sandy coastal strip that the. worthwhile part of Southwest' A frica exists. This r<" glon is least prmliisiiig. in the south where the rainfall is scant, llut even there the broad valley of the Fteh river and th.- valleys of its tributaries furnish regions in which thriving com munities have sprung up. while much of the dryer land supports flo.-ks of nnU -oats. Tlf rciri??!V in??r?? and more promising as one Journeys northward. In the cent -r of the <-oun 'try 14 inches of rain fn'.ls annually. A little farther north 1?-' and tlti'U 1* inches -is rcce'ved: while over mosr of t!ar tiorthetli iptartcr of the Inland regi-'ti '-it or more inches fall each year. Hcc Few Running Streams. o0c striking jbing about Soutb-Acst Africa is the lack of running streams even in the regions of heaviest rain fnlL The only year-round rivers are the Orange, which marks the southern boundary. and the Kunene an.l oka vhngn. which fonn p:irt of the north ern boundary. Most of the rainfall i.?. absorbed anil trickles down into un derground strata. In the dry stream b.ils and the "pans" or dry lakes, shallow wells usually find an abun dance of water for men and stock Many wells have been bon-d to con sidernble depths and tap abundant sup plies for individual and community use! From the slopes of the numerous mountains that rise 'from the plateau, too. .springs flow. Just as a rather extreme lack of rainfall seems to have decreed that the southern pleat eau country must be devoted to sheep and goat raising., so the relatively Ught niinfall keeps the southern three-quarters of the cohniry from agriculture except In a few small areas where irrigation Is practicable. The region of medium rainfall, however, is well adapted to stock raising and it Is in this fleld that the greatest development has been made. Kxcellent grass grows over the plateau region, in the moun tain valleys, and even in the extreme east along the edge of the Kalahari desert which stretches olf into liiH-iiuanaland.. l'.efore the coining of the Hermans the natives, espec ially the Ilerer.?>. had large herds of cattle: These were ! nearly wiped out by an epidemic of rinderpest in 1VJ7. An excellent -.??t erinary scrvici</orga.nized by the tier-, man colonial government. took the -it nation in hand and made the country on. e mor<- safe l"<>r cattie. Since then i |ie ..-att'le ?'-population has iiiereas.-i greatly. improved by the importation ,,f i,l led st i >? -1;. Horse -breeding is also i'.;irrifd on sUcccssj'uliy aiid camels have been Introduced and are doing welt One Good Farm Section. The one section of Southwest Africa well adapted to the Kuropean type of agriculture. and quite the ideal region from the point of view <?t the small faymer. is a small district around ujuotfontein In the north-central por tion of the territory. There, in a re doll about 100 t.y To mil' s, the raintal! from _? to "s inches annually, the soil is good, an-1 the .-liinate, thank to the altitude. is ideal. This region Is at the present end of ihe railway which penetrates toward the northeast. I n like tno-r .other se<-rit?ns ?;! the terri tory this liitle are.; i- p-a-'tiaidv i\<- 1 wooded. I'otatoes. wheat and the ..tlM*r iiiiroiM-i'ii d-s t 'ir;\.o. :i m ell i> kattir . or:i ami ntaiz-. The .Hitiatic and i! Condi*!'-: even . per ? nut the 'growing su-'h different inu as grape-, -app'.es and pea- le;s \ the one hand, and citrus fruits- ?n the other. \ The extreme nor'heirn port.on "? Soii-thwest At'riea ha< never by-eK de veloped by. the Kuropean T ""f11 This ari a '] u-v r<> the Portuguese frontier i# ?ji"j*?> ..heavily populate* b\ .natives tlKih ahv. other; ' ll' has i:-r bee'1 J.eti. rr TeVi by rail" ay-; and only i few white -ettler- Hve th,-r'-. IMaliis aivri:afe with \\-i?o}led re iriifljs. i.-?ooV| ? itiiber. trejs and pa ru ap' seat t- red about. rhdoutcedfy t |?i > serf ion" is- capable of prodti?iii_ on. ' tobacco. tigs and dates, as u e!l a* the present s'aplos. niai/-- and katlir corn. It was knuwn long ago that i large variety of ti^tierils were in the rocks of Southwest Al'ri- a. Jki (???j.jier mines in the tiorihca-r have be?'tt the most valuable of tlie orp de velopments. fopper -has been found in less promising (plant ities elsewhere, arid also Mn. Intensive deposits of marble ar ? known in several parts of the territory. Strangely enough, the worthless appearing coastal desert has ffejded the greatest returns. Piatiionds were found near its seashore in 1!WV* and from then until the \Vorhl war worth were taken out. In i;vj" a|,,ne worth wire ex ported About the Towns. ,\t present the white population of Southwest Africa is almost as much South African and l?oer as it is ?o>r mnn, thousands of Germans having lof. the colony :sfter the armistice. The estimated population Is something un i il?T I'o.oOi whites and perhaps 2U0.'**' iwtlve*. ' Walvls bay. the only good natural harbor, has never been developed. Swakopmund and I.uderltz bay or An gra Peipiena are the chief coast towns. The latter can he made into .1 port little if any inferior to Walvis. Swn kopmuml was entirely a makeshift of the < Senna ns. with only an Open road stead. r.ut it is s.i solidly eonstrucfml that Its abandonment would be un thinkable. It has a resident popula tion of about whites and natives and Is be.-oming popular as a seaside resort, l.ife in the eoast cities is more comfortable than miuht be sup I rosed. The shore Is washed by a cold e.irreiit which brings eool nights^nd tempers the days. The principal dltli eulty Is a lack of fresh water. Windhoek, the capital, is the most delightful residence place in Southwest Africa. H has a population of about 4.500 whites and natives. It I> more than mile above sea level, yet it is set in a beautiful valley surrounde-l by mountains. Trees and flowers thrive aUd there ':.re parks and orna mental grounds in the city, while i:> the neighboring country are vineyards and orchards. Cross- Word Puzzles Boon to Golf Widow It already lias been suggested that Cross-word puzzles are the almost providential and overdue instruments of vengeance ready to '',e hands of wives Who have long suffered from golfing husha.ids. The fart that a wife is daily getting bogey for the so lution of puzzles in the newspaper points the moral further. The golf widow can nov- he tied with the cross word puzzle widower. Evening conversations in the home should begin ro have two sides aud should run somewhat as follows: - "Sorry to h?* late for dinner, dear. Had to get in IS holes." "You're not late. Dinner's not ready yet. 1 1 :id to (ill in the lust IV squares in my puzzle." "Well, that's all right. I had a great game. Made bogey on two holes. Say, do you realize what bogey is on the fourth?" "Kleven, isn't it?" "What : Kleven strokes?" "No, silly. Kleven minutes for the fourth puzzle." "I'm talking about golf." "Hut let nie tell you about the thirl puzzle I worked on today. It has the sweetest interlock !" "Shushl on the fourteenth I had Jeff one- down and ? " "Two across Now It's time you're listening to me after all these years of golf 'monologue. Lend an ear On the sixteenth so un re across I was, as you might say, in a trap to think of a word of tive letters meaning a Tyro lean outcry. Wltat do you know? It { was 'vodel.' After that J foozled a personal pronoun- and got b?>t in the rough of 'he lower left-hand corner. Well. I got out of trouble, bin it cost me three minutes." "What a lot of drivel I You. ought to have <ei?n nit; today after !'d J'Stlreil ? i s)iar;.t.ned It and addressed ; the? " . "- Willi ;]je deitce of a pretty nib k 1 ? " ! gue?*ed the word was 'Or:hog?? n.d' ? " ^ - after which I sunk a I .tig i '?Lev word. One minute to ?!;i) ' ? "lu.ib:" "Blah y-iirs.-lf:" (A tribute' .of halt" an hour> silence.) "We!!, ray dear, .what's t!ie latent djrt "iti the neighbors?" "It > ?jui t.- interesting dear. I'll be glad to tell you. lint tirst 'el! nie what the i>oss said down at tire .itli -e j Today."? Fairfax l.'owney, in New York Herald Tribune Giant Salt-Cellar The Palestine government propones ! to erect a plant t'"r Tli?- recovery ..t It) ' odd bil'ioh i"ti> salt from the Iv.td i S'M- a -iar.: Sah-' Htar of -;i ; ?;?:! r? -:i t ly | unlimited i^p^ify-r-rUltil ver?v s>h>ti h-ige chemical factories ami w.tre | !j>>u>v> wUl '?j ??-tabii?heil r<? ;nd the ?lake, atid.'l.i- ; ?? -A ? ?? - and <1 ui?-t ??: .'<-n ; turieN w:\', place to the ?v;n<e!e>V ?Vt i ; i* ? ? f v. : . i ? ? . It ;s re?nar.?al?b; tha* The tti'is; le. '..* . r ? ;:i t!.> ? w ? d >Loitid -uO.' ??. t.l y .;. ?|!:;re :r>"--en tj&iis u? <;.? iTu|>? iff .i !!<???. < ?; ail :i ?? ! of sal; in tl.e !???. ?: ' ],<?rt!y- abVHlV- ten Ions c? s;i',t. 'i'i;e <-..ii?i?:s of >a:]t r< ?' of 1 !'? :. and r,:a-.?a. ?i:im. :... a ? Wlil. n i ? ! ? ?? - Pa i < ?Vf iiio t!ie ?' I ri<-' ;,e~j p.- cmistyy in ijn> w'o'rld. ? In . j j " ? i iji'e t |;i?. >;ra!i.e sin <!.,! ie^je* ?*!;?? Mv.d '-terrariea !: W it J) ;'s ? :t; .-.:.d ^lue^e^s. but >.? de:t" ,ij; -"j ??'are-. \vaNtrs -'thai I !.?'?>. have eanio. It it- g:"eW'?> :e !!. |;fe. ? ??? ???:?.?- . - '???.;? |j Finding New Power .VfJlK?U'?! '! * .'? j-rogre** ?>;???.??- ;in ; -un?; - ??t:i-".l!.tr. *??! el'- ; >. ? .. :.re it iti J di?? ?<*d 'itli ''iVtMt ?? io di^eiiVer a \v:i \ 'To tiisiUc :.n i ;4i?ns \\ h i ? -t> w : ! : ? r? -t ? ?:.? ? ? tii'.'- v:j'piie< .?!' tVill }iuii. oil. "The j pi' ,es> i hey >e> i, io pevT'orm in : ilicir i.vSoratories. a.' ortfiii a to f i l'oj.ii ^r I.anics .Mairi/;.:.". j> tJ .? marvelous one that it tare ,:se> every ?day in . siorir.g "Up in leaves ; and plants '?> >o:i?-ert i8g w. s e r:.af-. rial into w.od. ?!<?.. ljinier the f Moii ! of -'inliirht. Solution of the r:dd> i> ' ?.' 'Ught in California by I ?r. Il-r man A. Sj?o?*Lr and a staff of research workers. A year's eoti-utiipt ioll coal .it the present time rcpre>ei.rr. the a<cu'nii!ation of l'?? year>, he i?a yjs. Vienna Exports Coin m The output of the Vienna mint in I'.fci-i was the greatest since its fonhila tioik according to a report >>{ the lonlget committee of the national as setnhiy. t'tii'y a comparativeiy few of j the coins struck, however, were for ! Austrian account, the bulk going to I'Oland. IJulgaria, North and Kast At ! rica ami even Afghanistan, in the shape of the old Maria Theresa dollar. Altogether, tile Vienna mint, turned out coins, calling t'or 7.I"*; j.oiinds of silver every day of the year. Advancement in Tibet The Itiitter-burnintfs lamps of Lhasa, forbidden city of Tibet, soon will be n?> more. Their place will be taken, even in the most sacred shrines, by electric lamps, and electricity to light these lamps will be generated by a hydro-electric plant that is now male- ? i'lg its way on the hacks of pack mules i n-'ong trails reaching from the Indian IrVrder. Offsets the Weather First Bonnier (in the mountains) ? 0- ing to stay till Xoveiuber. eh? Must be rather cold here at that time of the year. Second IMt'o? Yes. but the hotel ??rotirielof loses some of the icy tua.i ner which d*.stiiiffulslu*s liiiu ?in Jui,^ and A Jg'Jst. ? Boston Transcript. A WRtGLEYS AFTeh EVERY Probably one reason tor the popularity of WRIGLEY'S U that it lasts so long and returns such great dividends for so small an outlay^ * It keeps teeth clean, breath 6wect, appetite keen, digestion good. Fresh and full-flavored always in its wax- wrapped package. Champion will render better service for a much longertime. That is whv it is .outselling throughout the world. I hu'rpt.jn X J jr hard S 60c. Blue Ho* jtiftili itfher can, 75c. More fhiin dealer % sett Cham* Vou uiU know ihr <cn ume by the doublt'ribbed core. Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo, Ohio Winder. Oat.. London, Paris ! I r?u ' \c<f #?T I I m 5 yy ( ..." ArtO WATER SYSTEMS " ,, ! I mUV-VATER S''4tf ?>? The M.inutacfurin^ Ic. - N. Y. W \ N I I l> ? ? Ol.OIU'.n I'M Tl lit !. :-? ? I.'. ? '! ? ? .-. I >p t . ? S:..' K k w'km::< i ?: .Vfciw V 'Klv ' . . I AKMI K- \ I ri.NTH?N! : N ! . I'M- : ? i ;-:i r. - <? ! ;. 5 ^ t - Wr V I'VM'V. W A : : : * . ^ \?>KF??I.K vn;.?2N!.% Have lovely (bmplexion You can :r..ikt> and keep your complex ion as lov. y n* a young rrirl's by givmc a little alter. tli ? to your blood. Kemerrher. a ifo.wi >"IT ; iexion isn't t>kin diep ? :t's health deep. ? Physicians a^ree that sulphur is one of the mo*t otTwtivr hi.xxi purifiers known to *c:er.ce. Hancock Sulphur Con:| ut.d id an old. r< uiHe. scientific remedy . that P'jrv^s the -i of impurities TaV- n internally fow drop^ in a trlas* "i water. :t ten at The root of the trouble. As a lotion, it toothes and heais. 60c and $1.31 the bottle at your dr-ir (rist's. It he can't supply you. son.j his name, and the price in stamps and wo will send you a bottle direct. Hancock I lycm St LPiit R Company f Baltimore, Maryland Henc-jek S^'phur <'.-np.>xnJ (Hrtmri'. ? SOe cn-f t ? fur ujtf wxt\ Hancock Sulphur Compound j i y W. N. U.. CHARLOTTE. NO. 40-1925.
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 1, 1925, edition 1
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