Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Nov. 18, 1920, edition 1 / Page 6
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-■ m- .fe f c. fe- . r=^. t ■ty^ & k Ir' n 'VI HDIIBmilS BHUl-IHWII M Health Restored to Texas Lad]i|^ Who Is Now Well and Strong, Able to Do All Her / Housework and More. Rosebud, Texas.—Mrs. Annie Lan^, of R. F. D. No. 4. this place, writes as follows regarding her experience with Cardoi: “Some time ago I had a nervous breakdown of some kind . . . 1 was very weak, and so nervous. It •• trouble. all seemed to come from for at ... I had fainting spell-s and suffered a great deal, but more from the weak, trembly, no-account feeling than anything else. I knew I needed a tonic, and needed It badly. “I began' the use of Cardul, to see If'I couldn’t get some strength, as I knew of" other cas^s that had been helped by Its use. I felt better . . . I soon saw a great improvement, so soon saw a great improvement, kept it up. “I qsed seven bottles of Cardul, and sayThe money was well spent, for I grew well and strong. Now able^to do all my housework and a great deal of work besides.” If you are run-down, weak, nervous, and suffer, from the alHnents peculiar to women, It is very likely that Cardul will help you. In the way ft has helped thousands of others, during the past 40 years. Take Cardul, the woman’s tonic. -*Adv. Some people prune their genealog ical tree.s by cifttihg their poor rela tives. Catarrh Catarrh Is a local disease greatly Influ enced by constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE' is a Tonic and Blood Purifier. By cleansing the blood and building up the System, HALD'S CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allows Nature to do its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. j. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. A girl is anxious to ,be given in mar riage and a woman Is glad she Ifen’t sold. Back Given Out ? ly lame, achy back. Likely it’s your kid neys. A cold or strain oittimes congests the kidneys and slows them up. That may be the reason for that nagging backache, those sharp pains, that tired; worn-out feeling. You may 'iMve head aches and dizi^ spella, too, with annoy ing, bladder irregularily. Use Doan’s Kwney Pills. They have helped thou sands. Ask your neighbor! A South Carolina Case Mrs. tv. L. An derson. 1222 Lau- ■ Ten’s St.. Aiken S. C., says; "I had kidney trouble' some time ago, which caused a duU ache in the small' of my back. I couldn't rest and I felt tired all theCli lime. My kidney.sr acted irregrularly. Dizzy spells often came over me and affected my sight. I was advised to try Doan’s Kidney Pills, which I did. One box entirely rid me of the trouble." Gat Doan’t at Any Stoca, 60c a Bex RIONCT P11«1S FOSTER.MiLBUaN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. To abort a cold wd prevent com plications^ take The purified and reHned calomel tableU that are nausealesi, safe and ourea Medidnal virtuet retain ed and improred. Sold only in sealed packageta price 35c. FRECKLES Caticura Talcum ‘ FuciuUngly PrM>—t' Always Healthful Satp 2Sc, OiatBMat 25 and SOc, Talcaa 2Sc. Persistent Coughs fnmpl I ara tteagerou*. Oct ^ . Pritatioii: and aaCe for youat and rmMOT ITvOr Effective lo oaiataa in PIS O'S A' N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 47-1920' niNSTEII BUIES INASAMINOB American Woman Physician Tells of Osman Agah, Known as “Tyrant of Kerascom.” ACKNOWLEDGES NO MASTER Threaitena to .Kill Anyone Who Aids Suffering Armenians in Any Way—* Dr. Ndrton Contracts Trachorha While Treating Children. New York.—^If science eventuiilly succeeds ‘Checking the ravages of frn’choma, The scourge of ancient Egypt, arfd since the beginning of his tory one of the anost baffling of human ailments, the achrevement will be due Ip no small measure to Dr. Blanche .Vorton, an American woman physician, who hei’self contracted the disease while treating Greek and Annenian or phans in the Near East relief orphf,n- age In Kerasooin, a little village on the Asia Minor coast of the Black sea. Though suffering severely from a virulent attack of the malady, Dr. Nor ton cjime to Constantinople, and dur ing "her treatment—one of the most painful known to physicians—she con tinued her efforts In behalf of the tra- ?homous thousands of the^Levanh As a result, a hospital has T^een opened In the Sultan’s capital capable of car ing for about 400 Greek aiid Armenian orphans at one time. In recognition of her service at Ker- asoom, where her patients were large ly orphans of Greek parentage, the Greek government conferred on her the War Cross of Qrst woman to be so honored 25 Per Cent of Children Afflicted. “Trachoma Is more prevalent and a greater menacb than we realize,” Dr. Norton declared on returning to New York to complete her treatment.' “In the Armenia .in'l Greek orphan ages in Constantinople an extensive survey revealed niore than 25 per cent 5f the children suffering from the dis- .ea.se. In addition, there are thou- •sapds of adults and Turkish children 'n the city who become Infected.” The high degree of .contagion of tra- Klng George—the Society Woihah Weds Poficemw Louise Q. Beavor, society woman of New York, and Thomas J. Leonard, a mounted policeman, who were wed secretly not long ago. The bride Is re lated to many prominent families, and Is a well-known horsewoman, and tlie groom has been a member of the Central park mounted squad ‘for several years. ' ' , . choma, according to Dr. Norton, Is one of-Its worst a.spects. She caught it when one of the children she was treating was seized with a violent fit of sneezing andj .shook a tiny molecule, of the discharge from his eyes into hers. “Maybe It Is a goods thing that I caught the disease, however,” she said. “I begin to think that sometimes It Is well for a doctor to suffer fromdhe disease he or she treats to any ex tent. Until I had to undergo the treat ment I never realized the pain that I Inflicted on those tiny little waifs in the damp schoolhouse cellar In Kera.- sbom where they were segregated.” “Tyrant of Kerasoom." It was while treating these orphans that Dr. Norton met Osman Agah, "the tyrant of Kerasoom,’\nn erstwhile fish- CARGO SHIP RUN BY ELECTRICITY a- tclipse, Soon to Go Into Service, First Ameri&a.n Shij by Such Power. lip Ml IVOil COST OF OPERATION IS GUT Reduced Consumption of Oil and 'NurPiber of Crew Slashes Expense in Half—Admiral Benson Strong for Electric Drive. Washington.—The first electrically propelled'- cargo vessel to fly the American flag will be placed In serv ice at this port within the next few weeks by the United States Shipping Board. The vessel will lly the hohse flag t)f the Internationtrl Mercantile Marine company and will be u.sed by that concern Ju trans-Atlantic trade. The Eclip.se, as the ship lias been christened, will mark the introduction , , _ .. because our competitors will ° ‘;rrwe mn.st go back to coal merchant ships, the use. of this power In the pu-st having been confined to naval vessels. The shipping board l.s already so confldeiit^'of the s'uccess of the Eclipse lliut construellou of several other freighters similarly powered has been started. The Eclipse' Is of 12,000 dend-weiglit tons, 440 feet long and 55 feet beam. Her electrical propul sion machinery was built by the Gim- eral Electric company at Schenectady, and installed by the Vulcan Iron .Works of Jersey City. * Driving a ship by electricity means 'revolving'the propeller shaft from a motor. To supply the power to turn this motor a' generator must be oper ated somewhere else In the vessel, ju.s’t as'’generators in power houses make current for street railways. On board ship these generators may be driven by an economical steam turbine or by a DIe.sel engine. ’ Cost of'Operation Cut In Half. The records of the electrically driv en New Mexlcd of the United States navy, ^show that oil consumption Is lowered about one-third by the u.se of; electricity as motive power and, the cost of operation Is cut In half, prin cipally as a result of the reduced num ber of men necessary In engine room crews. It Is not only pos-slble for an ofllcer to operate an “electric shliv” with small levers from the bridge, but, if need be, virtunlly the entire engine room mechanism can be handled by one man. Among the many advan tages attached to electricity ns sea-' .power are the added hull space for cargo and the greatly reduced fuel eonsu;nptlon. The first upplloation of the electric drivt* prlncjpk^ was made on h vessel x'seinhllng closely the merchant ship, iilihoiigh fh'e Hint really successful '•rufi ID iis! thi.s iMjwer was the naval (•sillier Juplfer, launched Id 11)12. It was icjji ship that proved coucltisively that electricity could be used success fully In seagoing vessels, - tf. - hen Admiral W. S. Benson was chief of naval operations he encour aged the adoption of the electric drive fdr naval vessels. After he had retired from the navy and was appointed to his present position as chairman of the shipping board interest' was enlisted again in the electric drive as the most economical method of oper ating merchant vessels. Economical, Says Benson.- ' The admiral Is the first chairman of the shipping board to come out la favor ■ of. an electrically operated merchant fleet. “I am convinced,” he said, “of the possibilities of-electricity in our mer chant marine. “We have domonstrated on ouf hat‘ tie,ship that the electric drive Is more economical than .the ordinary drive. We must save every gallon of fuel- oil t>at we possibly can, and when I say coal I say It with li good deni of burning; that \ye cannot get oil in all parts of the'world, or that !t doesn’t pay, pr something like that. If» we ever give up fuel-oil, unless wc can .get sometliiiig better, we might as well take to the- woods, and cut timber for our fuel. We can’t compete with foreign competitors on any other than an oH-fuel basis.” Brazilian "Varmint" Caught. Shelb.v, Ky.—A Brazilian marsupial, an anltnul the size of a rat but *re- seinbling a ’possum, was found In a buneb. of bananas here and Is on ex hibition. . erman who fqught in the World w;ar, returned with a wooden leg, and be came a hero in the 6yes of his towns people. ^ “He Is the most fearful creature I ever saw,” she said. “The native Christians that have'so far escaped his wrath live in abject terror of him and of the band of mountain robbers that he has surrounded himself with. “Few Armenians are left In the town. Most of them died of starva tion In the streets, with no one tolhelp them. For Oilman had promised to have killed Immediately anyone ■who might-dare to feed or aid them in any way. He has placed oil and gasoline all about the outskirts of the town and had threatened ^ set It afire and drag all the Greek population to the mountains If allied warships or allied troops attempt to move against him. He Is holding the lending Greeks of the city as hoj5tng:es. No Christian Is allowed to leave the city. Mustapha Kemal himself could not move him, for Osman acknowledges no one to be his master. He is 4he most absolute tyrapt that, I believe, has existeff since the days of imperial Rome. “The brigands that this creature has gathered about him are at once the m.ost fearful and the most wonderful group of ipen I have ever ^en.” =0 Cyclone Tosses Boy Into Tree Branches Santa Clara, Cal.—A high wind that passed througji Santa Clara tossed J. Bingwall, a 15- year-old boy, into a tree, knocked over George Campra and a horse he was hitching, uprooted fruit trees, demolished several private garages and caused considerable minor damage. It was said by local residents to have been the first wind of its kind since 18GS. Glass jkylights from an es tablishment belonging to walnut growers Vvere blown into the street and smashed, and lumber from lumber yards was scatter ed several hundred yards. One private garage was re ported to have been carried for ty feet and an automobile moved from the side of the street to the center of the roadway. A Voteran Leading a Novice. Milton, Ky;—Gebrge ^yllliamson, aged nlnety-slx, reckons he has voted 75 times during the last, seventy-five- years. This election will be the eighteenth In which he has voted for a president. The experience, however; will be brand new tO’* Mrs. Lucinda Williamson, aged seventy-six,, his wife, whqi is casting her first vote.- I^lish Peasants Helping Their Army I’ollsli peasants putting up htrbed-wU-e entungicmems along the Rusalun- E’ollsh front. The peasant folk form a large part of the Follsh army, and those who are not actually hi tlie army always give servlco whenever poulbl^^ Thie la an actual photograph from the war aooe v*AaotWRoya! Griddle Cakes and Waffle From the New Royal Cook Book .a T HEllE is an art in making flapjack pan cakes,. griddle cakes or wheats, call them what you wilL But it Is ah aft very easily and quickly acquired if you follow the right recipes. The secret, of course, is Royal Baking Pow der. Griddle C^ea IK cups flour Vi teaspoon salt S teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 3 eggs IV^ cups milk • ' 1 tablespoon shortening MIt and sift dry Ingredi ents; add beaten - eggs, milk and melted shorten ing;, mix well. Bake Im mediately on hot. griddle. Waffles 3 cups flour 1 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder K teaspoon salt IK cups milk 2 eggs 1 tablespoon melted shortening • Sift flour, ttaklng iiow- der and salt together; add milk to .yolks of eggs; mix thoroughly and add’to dry Ingredients; suld melted shortening and mix ’in beaten -Rhites of. eggs. Bake In well-greased hot waffle Iron until brown. Sefve hot with maple sy rup. It should take about IVi minutes to bake each waffle. ROYM. BAKING POWDER Absolutely PuM^ ) Mada from Cream of Taxlir, deriTed from grapes. FREE Hew Royal Cook Book con taining these and scores of other delightful recipes. Write for it to-day. SpTAL BAKING POWDER CO. US ^Uton Streep New T ork Oitr. Some men become crooked In trying to make both ends meet ' Cuticura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub In Gu- tlcura Ointment. Remove sui-plus Ointment with tissue paper. 'This if only one of the things Cuticura will do If Soap, Ointment and Talcum are usfed for all toilet purposes.—Adv. It’s the little things that count. . Realization is ivpver a luxury to the mail who did not hope. For speedy and effective action Dr. Peery’s “Dead Shot” has ho equal. One dose only will clean out Worms or Tapeworm.—^Adv. Great barkers are nae biters. SEND NO MONEY Goodrich uHiiionatiuiing liras; all nonskid. Will give t.OOO mileage: 30x3, }6.50; 30x3^, $';.60; 32x3^, $9; 32x4, 110.60; 33x4, $11.60; 34x4, $12.50 We ship C. O. D., subject to examlnattoh. Specify SS - or clincher. K. & 3. Tire & Supply Co., B. Chicago, Ind. FOR THE BEST TABLES MAXWELUHOUSE 'GOOD TO THE LAST DROP SEALED TINS AT GFtOCERS m a Cost of 1}^ a Cord I Sand today tor BlgSpa^ Offer and Low Direct Piles oa,tba OTTAWA, th« Ona- Uan Saw, the Brst made and sold direct frqm factory touser, Giatcftubornver ihd money-makar egyr ihvented. o4urs ntTAWi any size log at the rate of a foot a mlnata. Does the work of ten men. As easily mofodtromlogtologareattocat is eny whaeltnorow. t-Cycla Frost Proof En gine has balanced crank abaft—pclIa over 4 ll-P, Magneto equipped: no batteries needai SpteW Clulch Cuta Down Trapp SrwtLormByi^ower DdUfl and other mac Mont ApplM For ay Lo noYa, conm a. WheaiKituw ine nme oampe. feed ^ fa FoUey forolKhado Cash or Easy Paymenia Shipped direct^ 90 Days Trial NewalUng—no^ay.^'LettS. -7- — ■ '■ .OTTAWAaawyonrlogsandpay ’ -U 11 ^ V" 10-TEAR aUARANTH. OUnafianp s## tb* OTTaWa at work on yoor faim once and yon wO nevar glvs It up, Tboosaiuls In naa, every owner a booatar. Oot-eawa any other on the market. Send today Cor FEEX; BOOK and Special 01^. On&WA MfG. CO., 2725 Wood SW^Htava. hnt. If It’s a wise acre it gets itself di vided up into building lots, IN OaSi K'OU So FRAUS Name “Bayer” on Genuine TKe ttnlcK mnd Soke Core for malaria, chills, fever and la CRIPPE It In a Powerfal Toulc and Appetizer Will cure that tired feeling, pains In back, Umbs and bend. Oontaliia no qalnlne, nrnenlc or liablt-r-^rmiiiK Intcredlenv. Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre scribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe Joy iffllllons. Take Aspirin only as told In the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neural gia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of tvvelvei Bayer Tablets of As pirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of MonoacetLcacldester of Sallcycacld.— -kdv. Have Yon Tried Theml Ask Your Druggist or Dealer Trial Size 10 cts. —r Kegular Size 25 cts. OnUBEItT BROS. A GO, BAltlmoro, Hd, Awful Sick With Gas Eatonle Brings Relief The upper dog la willing to ‘akc the lK)ue and let the under dog have the sympathy. w Morning Cl teepYbur EVes ji.nl VHle for ri«» Owe V«ek Merlne 1/ “I have been awful sick -with gas,” writes Mrja. W. H. Person, "and Is all I can get to give me Acidity and gas on the stomach quickly taken up and carried out by Eatonle, then appetite and strength come back. And many other bodily miseries disappear when the stomach Is right. Don’t let sourness, belching, bloating, Indigestion and other stom ach Ills go on. Take Eatonle tablets after you eat-Hiee how mnch better you, feel. 'B^ box costs only a trifle with yov draggist’s guarantee. • dliA • 4 .i'4 ■.■w •1^?' f ■J ! I 'f-'d P
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Nov. 18, 1920, edition 1
6
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