Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Nov. 22, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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-■r - --‘.v.^. 4 ■ tV' * *-wrv>i* ;. ■ > . '{;"' HOKE cJooNTT jduUifAi4,mEroiiD, N. c:^ . .. ,. . .• • •' ■ • -V V. ;■ ' i*' tT' ‘•fr ■flit nHi Gmiii B« USE miiiJimi Get Rid of It by Taking Dheney’a Before It Turns Jnto Some- thing Worse X>oM that’ haekiair co lri> worry york iMoanse It baaca on aot Really It la a cauae for worry, for If you don’t yet Ad of It you may find yourself the vlc> ttm of a far more serious malady. Thus It would be worse than fool- lah to let It so on. setUny worse and worse, without taklny the easiest and thickest method of puttlny an end to the trouble and so save yourself from What miyht turn out to be a very aeri* ^ ana complication. Suppose you yo to the druy store and yet a bottle of Cheney’s Expec torant and beyin mkiny a teaspoonful every two hours. 'Keep it up and you’ll flud that by tomorrow the cough will have almost entirely disappeared and In a few days will be completely gone. The time to get the best of a cough Is right at the beginning—when you first notice it. Each day you neglect tt only makes it more difficult to pry loose its hold ori you. The sooner you begin treatment the sooner you will «et over the trouble. Begin now. Sold.by all druggists and in smaller towns by general merchants in 30c and •Oc bottlea—Advertisement mPORTIINr NEWS THE WORUI OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS AND OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN DAYS GIVEN THE NEWS JIF^THE SOUTH What la Taking Place In The Souths land Will Be Found In Brief Paragraphs Foreign— Experienced. Bartender—“Why don’t you get out and hustle? Hard work never killed nobody.’’ Mose Lazibones—“Dat’s an Infernal lie, suh! I’s lost four wives dat way.”—Baltimore Times. Ceata LaaaTo Keep Clean. More than 250,000 deaths and ovei • 4,500,000 cases of serious illness an- nnaliy »are ancribed by Federal and State health reports to needlessly un- aanltary conditions. It Is an amaz ing fact that most'of this needless Jack of 8anitatlon( is found, not in the dUea, bat among the rural and amall-town population. ' Yet wholly sa^tary conditions may be brought In the country just as quickly tmd ei^ly as in the city. The actual expenditure Involved Is very small, especially when you consider how much the family’s health will be Improved as a result It will assure also, of course, a great improvement in comfort Septic tanks, privy vaults, protec* tion for domestic'water supplies,'.^h^* proof outbuildings—all of these can be provided for a little cost and a lit tle work by any man; Full directions on how to do It, what Is the best struc ture for each Job, what tools you wUl require, bow much ^ement, how to mix . and place the concrete—all this may bb had tree on request to the JPortland "Oement Association, 111 West Wash- Ingtim Street. Chicago. Ask for "Con crete In Home Sanitation"; you will get It free by return mail.—Adv. ^ f Hi> Pippin. "You are the apple^if my eye,” So Cholly often used to sigh. So they got spliced and now she ’ screeches i ■Whenever he would eye the peachM. MOTHERI GIVE SICK BABY ‘‘PALITORNIA FIG SfYRUP" Harmless Laxative to Clean Liver and Bowels of Baby or Child. Even constipat ed, bilious, fever ish, or sick, colic Babies and Chil dren love to take genuine “Califor nia Fig Syrup.” No other laxatiye regulates the tra der little bowels SB nicely. Itr' sweetens the stomach and starts the liver and bowels actl^ ;plthout griping. Con tains no^idRbflcs or soothing drugs. Say “California” to your druggist and avoid counterfeits! Insist upon gen uine “Callfot^ Pig • Syrup” which contains dlree^ons.-AdvertlsmenL It isn’t until a boy has celebrated his eighth birthday anniversary that he A begins to notice h'is father’s Ignorance. V——e- DEMAND WER” ASPIRIN Tdke Thbletir Without J^par if You ^ the .Safety "Bayer Cross.” Warning!' /Unless you see the name •Bayer” w p^kage or on tablets you arc not gettjhg the pmuine Bayer A^ilrin proved safe by millions ahd iwescrlbed by physicians for 23 years. Say "Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous.^—^Adv. . The Proper Wish. ^ “Yes, I am” running for office." "Well, ; tTHtTVyl-VB-^y jjgfnpAa ” , Best Way to Relieve Pain Is by direct outside application and the best Tcn^y Is an AUcock’s PlastM —tto original and genuine.—^Adv. 0onT cart your bread upon the wa- 'tat today ahd expect It to come back la the form of sponge cake tomorrow. .Y ■ ' ■ ’ Thewaaedd^Key».ifi Good Health Pf takhog one or two Brandretb Pills iM bed time. They cleanse the system and phrify^ tbe blood.—Adv. Great Help. *1 want a. tall trombone player.”. •Why tall?" "Well, you know orchestra space la limited. If the-trombone player la Br: tali he can play over the bead of the "diet,In ,fr»»at of, him.” Germany has decided to repudiate the treaty of Versailles and' not to comply with either the reparations clause or any other of the clauses of the treaty as long as the French and Belgians occupy the Ruhr, says a dis patch to the London Dally Mall from Berlin. The former Duke of Cumberland has suffered a stroke of apoplexy on his estate in Upper Austria. His con dition is serious. An attempt Is to be made to recover from Lake Nemf near Rome the float ing palace of the Emperor Tiberius, consisting of two galleys, which have been buried In the mud for 19 cen turies and are believed to contain marvels of ancient curios are equal to those found in the tomb of Tutank hamen. A dispatch from Essen says Baron Krupp Von Boblen and the Kruqp di rectors Hartwl^, Brubn and Oesterlln, who were convicted of opposing the French occupation and given long •prison terms have been provisionally id and It Is assumed they have been definitely pardoned. “I have spared no pains to let the allies know that this country is un able to continue indefinitely the spirit necessary to co-operation, If the pres ent situation 4b not changed.” Thus Premier Baldwin, speaking In the house of commons, definitely niade-it plain that the "entente” is not func tioning, and that Britain may tHtb* draw from the Franco-Belglan-Itallan combination unless the continental powers alter their attItuBe./ Atanaa Nlkoloff, a Bulgarian, t^led on the' charge of assassinating M. Daskaloff, the Bulgarian ambassador In Prague on August 26 last, was ac- qulted by a vote of 8»to 4 after the Jury had been out 18 hours. A court at Eleusls has sentenced to death Generals Leonardopoulos and Gargalides and Majors Avrambos and Nicolareas, leaders of the recent rev olutionary movement. Many other of ficers of high rank Inf^olved In the revolt were sentenced to Imprison ment for life or long terms according to Athens dispatches. The body of Cjifford Throne, wide ly-known Iowa lawyer •'and econom ist, will be sent to the United States on the Berengaria, November 17, it was learned at London. 6enlstal Machaeo, a nationalist;, has been commissioned to forip a cabinet succeeding that headed by Antonio Marla Silva which resigned on Octo ber 30, .Recording to Lisbon dispatch es. China’s new constitution, by a spe cial "drafting committee” of parlia ment and promulgated -simultaneously With President Tsa Kuih’s Inaugura tion, will end the Iniquitous tuchun system of government, If Its provis ions can be enforced. General Jan C. Smuts, prime min ister of South Africa, wants the Unl- fed States and preat Britain to go ahead with the proposed reparations inquiry regardless 'of France’s atti tude. In an\)pen letter published In "the London Times he again urged Great BrYtain to co-operate with the United StatekyM calling the confer ence. ‘ Washington- Although the door still Is open for Atnerlcan helpfulness In the repara tions problem. President Coolldge re gards the latest move In that direc tion as having come definitely to an end. ’ 7 The cell^ doors of the District of Columbia Jail swung open for an hour recently—long enough for Miss Gla- diola Peyton, 19-year-old prisoner, to marcb to the altar and become the bride of Frederick Ewers. Alumni reunions and dinners en livened the program of sectional meetings and other activities of the delegates attending the annual con vention of the Southern Medical-asso ciation at Washington. Meeting at Washington at the call of Warren S. Stone, grand chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi neers. heads of sixteen railroad labor organizations took up for discussion legislative proposals for which they may ask consideration at the coming sesBlon—of congress. - President Coolldge probably will de liver In person his message to con gress when It convenes next monfh. He considers It wise to continue t^e custom, revived by President Wilson and dontlnued by President Harding, although he is inclined to be guided largely by the desires of congress. • Exclusion from the United States of all aliens Ineligible to citizenship will be urged as a proylslon -of the immigration legislaUon to be consid ered by congress at its coming session by senators and representatives from n (Lumber of western stnteA Margin trading in • stocks, tkitais, grain and cotton would be prohibited by a bill which Senator King, Demo crat, Utah, Is preparing for Introduc tion as soon as congress meets.’ ' Rabbi Simon Olazer, of the Synagogue. New York, reiterated his challenge to Dr. H. W. Evans, im perial wizard of the Ku Klux Kbm to debate the Klan issue. "I .aih- g»lng to prove the Ku Klux Klw is a 100 per cent un-American, irrdiigloua aRd barbarous organization,” Rabbi Grazer telegraphed Dr. Evans, asking him to be present at the address the rabbi will make before a mass meeting in New York December 30. Delegates to^ the Southern Medical association concluded their annual convention In Washington with Presi dent Coolldge and the election of offi cers. At the white house, the formal ities of the customary handshake were dispensed with and President Coolldge spoke briefly. He declared the members of the medical profes sion were rendering “ a stsrvlce that reaches beyond any trade or occupa tion.” Hog cholera Is becoming more prev alent this,fall than In any year since the decline of the last extensive out break, which peached Its height in 1914, the department of agriculture anouuced. Reports show the disease has appeared recently in communities which have been free from It for 26 years. In many localities It gained considerable headway before hog rais ers realized the nature of the trouble. Domestic— Four persons were killed by Leon ard Portane, at Kelliher, 50 miles north of Bemldjl, Minn., according to a report. The d^ad are Oscar Timmy, 33, farmer; John Sanders, farmer, 60; Mrs. John Sanders, 60,' hls wife; J. A. Wilson, 46, marshall at Kelliher. Portano killed the four perjiniix At, different times during the day. Four Columbus men were killed when the automobile in which they werewjilding was struck by Pennsyl vania passenger train No. 31, at Fra- zeyburg, northeast of Newark, Ohio. The/^en were on their way for a day^B hunt and were driving with cur tains on the automobile. The Illinois supreme court was call ed upon to decide whether a woman can be forced to work on the streets In lieu of payment of a fine for vio lating an Injunction forbidding her to sell liquor. Lena Panchlre, of Ben ton, was fined $1,000 and sentenced to 100 days In Jail, the court specifying that she must go to work on the city’s streets If the fine was not paid when her Jail term expired. The city would allow her^1.66 a day. Taken for a thief as he made hls early morning rounds, Calvin BL Beese, milk wagon driver, was shW In the head by Louis P. Head, Dal las, Texas, newspaperipan. Though he challenged Woodrow Wilson’s accusation that Frafhce and Italy are “making waste paper” of the Versailles treaty, Balnbrldge Colby, who was secretary of state under Wilson, told Detroit bankers that his chief’s "philosopher Idea— the league of nations—Is still the only solvent for Europe’s Ills." ' Drastic revision .of divorce legisla tion to relieve conditions revealed by an extensive survey of the divorce situation in the United States will be urged at the quadrennial Methodist conference In Springfield, Mass., next May, It was learned at Ne-iv York at the. semi-annual conference of the board of bishops of the Methodist Episcopal church In Brooklyn. A bomb believed to have been sent from San Antonio exploded In the home of J. A. Barnes, prominent Cor pus Christl (Texas) teal estate deal er, killing Mr. Barnes and hls 12-year- old son. A wild swing at an opponent who ducked Just In time, cost the life of M. J. Muse, a truck driver of Dallas, Texas. ) Two bank messengers were murder ed by two bandits who stole $43,600 from them In a spectacular hold-up at the Flfty-llftS Street station of the West End, subway line In Brooklyn. Identification of the body found In a burned negro Church building near Tuscaloosa, Ala., was established as that of Irene Corley, of Bessemer, Ala., and Alf Winchester, insurance man and farmer arrested In connec tion with the case, was held without bon'd on a charge of murder at the preliminary hearing of Winchester. Lambros A. Coromllas, former Greek minister to United States and later mini^r of finance under. Premier Venlzelos, died at the Hotel Seyllle, New York, It was announced. Some years ago Judge K. M. Landis became famous by fining the Standard Oil compahy $29,000,000. Magistrate Oberwager„^of the Essex market court, saw his psdlry. $29,000,000 and raised him several billions, thereby achiev ing a new record for this event. The Judge recently fined Sam filler 16 billion marks for peddling German money without license. Miller gave the clerk a $2 bill. I Women followers of Frederick L. Rawson, spiritual "healer,” who knelt at hls bier for three days praying for his resurrection, continued their prayers as the body was being cre mated at Fresh Pond, New York city. Captain Robert Morris, w^o com manded • destroyer division 33 on the night of the Honda wreck, September 8, was acquitted of charges of negli gence in suffering vessels of hls or ganization to go aground, in'-a ver- ‘diet read by the Judge advocate of the general court-ipartial, San Dlaga Calif. e MIUOIIS OF HUE institutional . IMPROVEMENT BONDS SELL.AT GOOD FIGUE. NEW YORK BUNK SETS OFFER 9;trong Competition Is Offered, Includ ing Some of the State’s ' Financiers. Raleigh. V The state of North Carolina sold $10,649,600 of institutional Improve ment bonds to the First Naitnoal bank of New York city and associates,,^$3,- 049,500 of the issue b(/aring an inter est rate of 4.60 and $7,600,00 a rate of 4.75. A competing group of New York financial interests forced close figur ing for the bonds, and Governoll’ Mor rison and the council of state spent the full day in session before finally awarding the issue to the First Na tional . The other group of bidders was compoeCd of Hallgarten and com pany, Blair and company. Chase Se curities corporation and associates. Besides, five North Carolina balks and one individual submitted bidder small shares of the issue. Thdr4ew York financial people bid on the whole Issue so that the smaller bidders lost ouL ■ , The North Carolina bidders and the amounts wanted were as follows: A. E. Alexander, High Point, $2,000 at 6 per cent; Bank of Reidsville, $6,- 000 at 6 per cent; Murchison National bank of Wilmington $100,000 at 6 per cent; CJarolina Bank ahd Trust com pany? of Elizabeth City, $75,000 at 4.50. The sale was the first at which there was sqch lively .bidding. The First National, represented by its vice pers- idena, B. B. Saweezy, and by J. A. Vaningled, of the J. A'. Vanlnglen company, b#nd merchants, submitted four bids, seeking in addition to the institutional bonds five millions of highway bonds. No highway bonds were offered for sale, however. , In opposition to the First National’s accepted bid of 4.50 and 4.75. Hall garten and company and associates, operating through the Raleigh Bank and Trust company, offered a premluip of $64,961.95 on the $10,649,600 issue at 4.75 or a $5,325.96 premium for $1,- 600,000 at 4.50 and $9,149,500 at 4,76. Counting in the millions, however, the difference in interest made the First National’s offer the more advan tageous for the state, it was figured. Complete 89 Miles of Road in Month. All records lor the completion of ^rd surfaced roads under construc- . Rion in the State were smasSed during the month of October when 89.1 miles Of road were fihlshed, according to re ports made public by the State High way Commission. The record for Sep. tern her of this year was 83.9 miles of all hard surfaced types completed. ’The Public Service Production Co., of New Jersey, at work on approxi mately $1,000,000 worth of roads in Nash and Beaufort counties turned the longest mileage of flrilshed roads dur ing the month’, and the largest esti mate of costs that has ever been turned in to the auditors of the com mission. This company completed 3.25 miles of concrete road in one month. The *record of the company under the direction Yjf lleorge McNutt, who has recently been placed In charge of their operations in the State Sep tember, 1 they had been In difficul ties that held down production to less than two miles per month. J^Cs O. Heyworth, working on tl^e Lumherton- Maxton road stands second In the list for the month. Impending winter weather will cut down production of finished roads somewhat during the next few months, but Commission Page believes that the mileage will not drop below 50 miles per month during the winter, and an average of upwards of 70 miles during the year. More than 800 miles of road will be finished be fore the end of. 19923. The statement of completed mileage for the month does not Include gravel and other secondary type roads, but Ihe hard surfaced types. Concrete road completed reached 28.7 mllgp; concrete base, 31.4 i^iles and miscel laneous, including sand asphalt, pene^ tratlon macadam and waterbound ma cadam roads, 8.7 miles. Since July the work completed each month has been in excess of the amount of new Mnstruction let to contract. New Corporatlonii.^ ^ Charters,were flle3>vlth the Secre tary of State for the folio-wing corpar- ations to do business m North Caro lina: ^ / t Dodgfr U Drlvem Co. of Ashevllh, with $16,000 authorized capital and $11,000 subscribed by C. M. Forlune, J. R. Hooks, Jr., and R. O. Wells, of Asheville. Fledmont Bonded Warehouse Cor poration of Salisbury, with $100,000 authorized capital and $10,000 sdb- scrlb'ed by E. A. Goodman, L. G. Good man and/A. L. Klutz, all of Salisbury. Staple Crops In N. C. Pafs S300,000.tX» North Carolina’s cotton crop is worth $174,960,000. North CaroUna'ii tobacco crop Is worth $74,970,000. * “* North Carolina’s corn crop Is worth. $69,108,400. The three staple crops will bring into the farmers of the State, accord ing to season-average prices on the estimated production, Issued by the State Department of Agriculture, an aggregate of $309,638,400, pr a sum that will keep the State well within its place four from the top in the .value of agricultural products. The State’s superiority In cotton is well kmown. Following is the survey of theHobacco, corn and wheat crops. The tobacco crop in North Carolina shows the largest yield since the 1920 crop 'when it made the largest produc tion in its history. The 357,000,000 founds is about 25 per cent more than was produced last year and 12 per cent more than" the five years average. The yield of 700 pounds per acre is unusually large, as is shown by the 629 pounds per acre average jield for five years. This production Is at the expense of quality, although last year’s crop averaged 1 per -cent less. The price per pound is running below last year’s average. The general practice followed in planting 4he present crop was to leave It thIckeK in the row and to top. it higher thw usual. In fact, many fields were observed In Coastal coun ties that were not topped at all. The rank of second In the produc tion of tobacco will be maintained this year. Kentucky holds first rank with a yield of 476,000,000 pounds at an average of 800 pounds per acre, with the quality below last year’s,. This State la unusually fortunate in its present com crop which is the best since 1918, when 63,630,000 bpsh- ela were made. The present produc tion of 56,835,000 bushels has an aver age yield of 22.6 bushels per acre as compared with 20 bushels for the ten- year average. This year’s crop Is 13 per cent better than last year’s, while the average price for November lat was 16c higher than the 88c average a year ago. It Ys of peculiar Inteerst to realize that North Carolina has the largest crop of any Southern State except Tennessee and Texas. Texas being an empire In itself, eliminates compe tition. Tennessee’s large Interest in live stock and tendency to incline more to the Mid-western farming prac tices, with least interest in South ern crops, partially puts it In a dif ferent class. This is one of the evidences that Nortfi Carolina is not strictly a one-crop State. In fact, ft is one of tke most diversified states in the union. The* wheat crop for North.: Carolina with a production of 6,633,000 bush els is*the largest since 1920 when al most 8,000,000 bushels were produced. The value per bushel, however. Is more favorable. The small grain crop for North Carolina was genearlly good, especially in the heavier produc ing counties. The harvesting and threshing seasons were favorable for satisfactory housing of the crop. Pros pects are favorable for a good plant ing this fall. Bond Issue For More Highways. Another bond issue for highway con struction in North Carolina, with $25,- 000,000 as the suggested amount,, is be ing advocated as the outlook for a special session of the legislature next year grows more promising. If prominent friends of the highway movement continue their present at titude, a movement for an additional issue of twenty or twenty-five million will likely fallow an announcement from Goyernor Morrison of his inten tion to cal Ithe assembly together. What the governor proposes to do Is of course unknown and will not be in advance gf a report from the ship and wattr transportation commission. But thei'e are many hopeful that he will IsMe, the call. The/state’s-authorization of high way bonds now aggregates $65,000,000, and' wpporters of the proposal for an other iswe contend the state’s ability to meet great obligations is jfaore promising now than ft was when the first issue of $50,000,p00:$ca4' voted. At that time many goodroads enthus iasts advocated a $'75,000,000 issue while a $100,000,000 for good roads was a plan, of the early future. Another $25,000,000, It is claimed, would complete the program with a great big bang. The state, of course, will be well supplied with good roads with'the completion Of the present program, but the additional expendi ture would place it second to no other state in the union In the completen ness of its highway system. Importance Is added to the suggest ed new Issue when It Is reported’thay the administration favors it. Whether the administration will give the pro posal a chance to be considered de pends on the governor’s decision iui to a special sessic i. Employment Service Gives Jobs. A total of 2,412 persons were placed In positions of renumeration during the month of October by the Emplojr* ment Bureau of the State and Federal Governments In North Carolina ac cording to the monthly report of the Bureau issued by M. L. Shipman, director.; 1,978 of these were men and 434 .were women. The greatest numl>er were placed in positions by^ the Wilmington branch of tho BureYn wiych handled S30 while Asheville handled 612. GOIIIB RMDI DO HER WORK III 'f - lyih E.PiiiUiam*» Vendible Com*' pMttd Hide Her Sleep and Feel Better Evciy Wtj CUeagw HL-*"! ^ 'Feak ignd' nm- dosiyworlL lwa» tired dU the time, and dkzy, and oouw not Bleep and bad no> appetite. I tried dif ferent medkinaa for yeara, .bat thav did' not help me. Then I read in thejwpers about Lydia ham’a 'vegetable (Jompound and what lit, haddonejfor other women and gave it a trial. I begw to eat better and could sleej^ and consider^ it n wonderful medicine. I rewm^nd it to my friends and will never be wjtoout it —Mrs. M. Ohlen, 8640 S. Mhrshfield; Ave., Chicago, Illinois. It is such letters as these that testify to the value of Lydia K ,Pmkham'» Vegetable Compoimd. woman speaks from the fuUness of her heart ae describes as cotrectly as she ^ her condition, first the symptoiM that; bothered her the njost and later the disappearance of those syuiptoms. It- is a sincere expression of gratitude. For nearly fifty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound hsa been Bo praised by women. She Gets Blamed. Growls were heard Sunday morning. The lady In the apartment across the- air shaft called cautiously to ask what the trouble was. “I didn’t buy the proper supplies for Sunday,” explained the wife who was-- helng blamed. “But you came home with a full basket.” “Yes, but I forgot my husband’a cigarettes.” ,. “CASCARETS” FOR LIVER " AND BOWELS—IOC A box: Cures Biliousness, Constipation, Sick Headhche.Indlgestlon. Drug stores. Adv, No Need to Look Further. “I want damages!” shouted the bruised and battered man who had) been thrashed by a rival. “I think,” replied hls'W^d, after surveying him critically, "fhat if yon look, in the glass you’ll find you’ve got ’em.”—London Answers. . - BEST Timm-Tritd I^MEDY for GALLS STRAINS LAMENESS and mil Ahom* mt .HenwoiulCattle Says Jno. R.Butchinas, Durham, Com N. C.— For 16 years I have used OU Four Mexican Mustang Liniment et ji_ 11^ 1 consider it the best limmtni atamamy oh earth; I am never without it I Since recently uaed it on a bad gall on tBAM niy horse’s neck and h cured it im three daft." No Sting or Smart Containg No Alcohol PRFF for brautihil SOUVENIR PEN. * CIL. sent with complete directions for ptine Muitang! Cmiroent for timilr silments, and for nvegtock anti poultxv. Lyon Mfg. Go., 42SoathFifth St. brooklyn. N. i, ‘ 25ic-50c-$1.00 Sold Drug and General Stdreo Standby MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT BITTER TASTE, HEAD “SWIMS" Signs That Black-Draught Is Needed to Help Eliminate Pol- sons—An Arkansas Wom an’s Experience. Hatfield, Ark.—“1/ have used Black- Draught for a number of years,” says Mrs. C. V. Dale, of this place, “and I have never found any other liver medicine so good. When I get billons, my head swims rnd I get a bitter taste in my mouth, then' I know I must get something to eliminate the poison, BO for years, when I would get this way, I would take the Black- Dra lights “I always feel better after taking two or three doses. It cleanses the system and. my head quits swimming, and I feel like I can do my work, I nave recommended It to others.” Biliousness, dizziness, coated tongue, bitter taste, warn you that your liver Is out of fix. Prompt treatment, with a dose or two of Thedford’s Black- Draught, often Will prevent serious sickness. Bile poisons and other un- healthful matters should not be per mitted. to lodge In the system. Drive them out with Bteck-Dnaught, the old, long-established, )well-known, purely vegetable powdered liver medi cine. Keep a package In your house, handy for immediate use. Sold by good druggists everywhere. LIVER MEDICINE / * .‘■ml’ '■
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 22, 1923, edition 1
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