TITO RKVTFTVv' ',,KMWYLI,fc. N. C. PAOfl SEX FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1917 from Weak and Lame? , To Wetf ant Strong -v Mv TTMnAV Pills Will tfo 1 T otlur men and woniBii qulr.. ! what Uejr have dona lor Mr. l"L,a"f 8year, I irot almost down with r-v back," writ Mis. II. T. Htraynga ci" Gainesville. Oa., JC No. I. "I auf red from Inflammation of the blaU i it. and whenever I stopped doctoring I irrew worse. I tried i'oloy Kidney II lis, and after taking them awhile ry bladder action becume rtitular and (lie UnBlng senHatlon dwappeared. 1 can now etronger In my back than 1 ve ren for several yearn, and since get Ung well, I've stayed well ant had no return of the trouble." ; Start In now to use Foley Kidney nils. Tou will feel an Improvement f om the very first doses, showing ,w quickly they act on kidneys and Ladder. They stop Irregular urinary action, ease pain In back and aides, limber up stiff Joints and aching mus t 'es. They put the kidneys snd blail vm In sound, healthy condition. Try GARDNER DRUO CO PROFESSIONAL CARDS EDGAR H. WRENN. JR. LAWYER ReldBvIlle, N. C. Office Over A. S. Price & Co.'g .Store IRA R. HUMPHREYS : ATTORNEY AT LAW t . - . 8pecUl attention to nettling estates Practice In all courts, except Record pr Oowt Office in Fels Building brr A. 8. Price & Co.'i Store, P. W. GLIDEWELL ATTORNEY 4T LAW Prompt attention to 11 matter Intmted. Practice In all court Offloe In Citizens Bank Building MAJOR T. SMITH LAWYER .- Office over Burton & Pearson.s 8n Store. A general practice of thy law tnolnding settlement of estates) ' aa nstmnt of insurance, collection ol Claims, etc, tec. Practice in all courts lalms. etc. Practice in all courts. A. D. IVIE B. C. TROTTIf JULIUS JOHNSTON IVIE, TROTrER & JOHNS TON Attorney at Law Offices in the new Irrin Bn'M.l' wzt to Bank of Reldsvflle. JR. JOYCE t . Attorney at Law. Office to old Cltlaens Bi Bulldla. ' Practice In 8Ute aao Feder govts. Loaau negotiated. 1 PERCY T. STIERS ' (Mternty and Counstier at Law. RetdaHUe, N. 0. Special attention to negotiation foaoa, settlement ot estate, boylvr bad selling real estat. Insurant adjusted. Practice lr all eoarU. Office In Lambeth Building Oi 0klff Offloe. HUGH R. SCOTT ATTORNEY AT LAW, fjyedal attention to negotiation . lotas? conduct and settlement estates; buying and selling rtwl e tate. Office, ClUaens Bank Bldg J M. SHARP ATTORNEY AT LAW Office orer old citizens Bank Build tng, opposite Confederate Monument MIDSVILLB, . . .. .. . ... N. C McMICHAEL A RAT ATTORNEYS AT LAW Practice In all coirt lb. McMlcbael will be la the ete Ullle office on Tuesdays, Wednesdays rharsdars. Friday and 1 If&diao oa Saturdays. WILLIAM REID DALTOK ' ATTORNEY AT LAW Reldsvllle, M.C ' General practice of the law In Stats tad Federal Courts. ; Money loaned oa real estate. H late administered on end settled wl estate bought and sold. E. B. WARE ATTO R N EY AT L A W Office over Tulloch's Store. Loans negotiated. Prompt Attention. OR. J. R. ME AD OR DENTIST fl(loe orer Nw CWtAna Bank. Residence Phone 279-W. Thane Hi. DR. JULIUS S. WELLlT OfMTAL SURGEON. DBce orer Ftsr Tackw's Dra. Store. 'Pnon! 10. O S. FULK CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER AH Work Guaranteed Phone S3. F. O. Box 304. ' RsldirUle, N. C. Cead the paper regularly. AMBASSADOR GERRARD WARN8 OF A LONG AND BITTER WAR United States Hss Not Entered War Against a Weak and Broken Nation but Against a People Capable of Tak Ing and Delivering Many Hard Blows. Favors Universal Military Training. By PORTER EMERSON BROWNE of the Vigilantes. AnibuflMiiiliir (ierurd Is no alarmist. Anilm.Shiidor d'cranl I no Jingo. ! tber is lie u tool of the Wall street In terests nor a predatory luiinttlon man ufacturer. So when Ambassador tier- ard tells those United Slates of our that the German menace Is real, actual and Immediate It behooves all good American!! to stop, look and list on a lot When I anted Ambassador Gerard as to what Heemed to him the most Important phase of our nutlonal prob lem hl answer was charaeteristl "ally : "Germany. "Germauy," he went on, "has mo bilized and put into the Held, in ac tuul war service, 13,000,000 men. Of these 13.000,000 men 1,350.000 have been killed, 3."50,0OO permanently dls shied. All the rest that hare been wounded or disabled have returned to and are now with the colors. And that leaves 11,350,000 troops thnt the Oer mails now have In the field. These figures are not guesswork; they are ap proximately exact. Has Incrested Her Navy. "And furthermore." he continued, for the bad news was not yet over, "dur ing the past thirty-two months Ger many haa been enlarging and Liercus lng her navy until It Is greater in size and formidabillty than ever before. And ttiut, too, these I'nlted States of ours have challenged to a life and death combat. "Whereforo doesn't It seem to you. since the United States hus align ed Itself ngnlnst a nation so pre-eml ueutiy powerful, so terribly efficient and bo absolutely ruthless as the Gcr man nation Is and has shown Itself to be, thnt the United States should make very elTort to equip Itself lu every way to face so tremendous a menace?" I nodded, and profoundly. It did! It certainly did! "But," I queried, "Isn't there any chance of 1U being only a short war? The shortage of food" "Is something that can't bo relied upon," be Interrupted. "One good bur rest will put Germany buck upon her feet. A good harvest every" year will keep her on her feet. And uccldents are always liable to happen. Further more, while civilians ell through Ger many are feeling the pinch of the food shortage the troops are kept fed. Warns Against Short War Idea. "One thing I want particularly to warn my countrymen against la the so called short war Idea. It was this fallacy that so 'seriously crippled France, that so seriously crippled Eng. land. In their preparations for their struggle w ith Germany. They thought it was going to be only a short war, so they nmde their preparations only from day to day, from month to month. It Is not for us to fall Into this same, this obvious, error. There is no Indi cation that this will be a short war. On the other hand, it looks as though It would be u very long war a long war and a bitter war. "For this, first inouey and supplies. Credit to the allied governments and everything that, from our vast re sources, we can supply them. "And then universal military train ing. The volunteer system is no good. In times of national need it has always broken down, as it will always break down, because It Is economically and psychologically unsound. ' Conscript Ion Is good os far as It goes, but It does uot go far enough. The one thing, aud the only one thing, that will give us the number of trained soldiers that we must have Is universal military tralu Ing. And that Is what all of us here in America must strive to gain. "Furthermore, I want to impress, and Impress as hard as I know bow, because It is most important, the pres ent tone of the German !r't. It is cruel. It is brutal. It U I "With the Gern ::ins this i.-, a war of Hate, with a capital II They are to win if they con. To win they are go ing to use all their resources, every means in their pow er, fair or foul or even worse. They are going to fight with every uiun, with every gun, with every ship, with every means and ev ery agent that He in. their power to use. "That is what we face, not a short war, but a long war, and a bitter one; not a broken nation, but a strong, cruel country capable. of taking and giving many a grievous blow; not a disorganized nation, short of men and supplies, but possessing still the great cut and still virtually as Well equipped an army as Is possessed by any nation in the World. "Let these, then, be the slogans of America:. Complete and perfect prepar edness, vast armies raised on the basis of universal military service and a whole hearted and whole souled co operation with the allies. "We are no longer neutral, it Is now our war, America's war. Let America prepare to fight it as America can aai. God willing, w ill!" WATCHING THE CLOCK. I can't abida to a man threw away hia tools the minute the clock beglna to strike, as if he took no pleasure in his work c- was afraid of doing a stroke too much. " The very grindstone ull go on (Join a bit after you loose it. Adam Bade. I SERMON AT THE FUNERAL OF A 8TAR BALL PLAYER The folowing la a sermon delivered by the Hev. Don O. Tullus, pastor ot the Poplar street Presbyterian church, of Cinclnnatti, at the funeral of the late "Duck" Kwlng, star ball player for the Cinclnnatti Reds, Na tional League: "1 he shades of evening are begin ning to fall upon the diamond of life. The gajxe is almost ended. The score Is a tie. Dreuthless the crowd sits awaiting the end. This game will not decide the world's championship but the greater struggle of eternity. One is there among the war scarred veterans upon whom all eyes are turn ed. He has won many a galme before. vV 111 he be able to win today? He has iieard the plaudits of thousands 'and received the applause of millions In I' Is time. Can he win this game? Death hurls the ball toward the bat ter. Strike one, cries the uimplre. Again the sphere files through the dis tant gloom, and the umpire's voice Is heard to say, "Strike two." There is but one more chance. A single will do htJgood, neither will a Kucrlllce count. There is nothing in closing moment that will be of any value but a home run. For the third and last tire the bat ter stands erect at the plate with his features immovable and his frame like ron. He takes one last swing at the ball and sends it to a distant corner of the right field fence. And the dauntless Ewing is seen to make his last circle of the bases. One, two, three, the ball is being re turned from the right field fence. Suddenly the dust clears away, and the great umpire of the Universe is heard to say, "Safe at home." Baseball and Horse Racing The proposition to cut out baseball hi this country during the war ap pears t obe gaining serious considera tion. Some o fthe State league ball grounds have already been converted Into farms, and no doubt much to the benefit of the respective communities Governor BIckett has recommended the dlsbandment of all professional leagues, and this suggestion was not lightly made. We will probably hear more or less discussion along the sug gested line, and it Is probable that its advocates will grow in number as the seriousness of war becomes more for cibly impressel upon them. The Bri tish Government has found it expe dient In the name of National econo my to suppress - all sports, chief of which In that country being horse racing, ajnd the race courses are to be kept closed during the remainder or the war, despite columns of protests against such an action In the London papers. It is argued by the race ad vocates that "racing is necessary to ascertain what colts and fillies, owing to their speed, stamina and soundness, should be used by breeders, and this can only be ascertained on the race course," The contention that the race horses consume too much, feed is met with the claim.-that, "the fair daily aerage of oats for a horse in full training is from thirteen to four teen pounds," and that if this were reduced to oatmeal It would weigh not more than nine pounds, "and the gen tlemen who think, they could feed twenty or thirty people on that must be inclined to credit thetxselves with miraculous powers." We shall expect Governor Bickett to be hearing some Arguments from the standpoint of the "fans" In the course of the next few days. Charlotte Obserber. Castor i a For infanta and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Mways bear the Signature of When you have anything to sell," advertise in our Busi ness Builders, five cents pel line for one insertion; 10 cente per line for three insertions. a i Gentlemen, we want you to understand the vslue oj buying from B. S. Motley & Co. in Danville. For that purpose we're going to tell ycu something about this big concern every week in The Re view for icme time to ccrne. We've rcccrtly bought the entire stock of Hodnett, Ad kins & Mobley Co., and that, added to our already immense stock of hardware, gives us approximately a $115,CC0 set of merchandise for jou to make jour selections from. B. S. MOTLEY & COHPANY, Danville, Va. The War Spirit S. R. Winters is a newspaper man of Durhaiti a correspondent and he Is physically about as big a bundle of dry xoods, but intellectually he carries the stuph and makes a cracking good correspondent. Mr. Winters haa a very happy way of expressing himself, and ho generally writes what he thinks he should write without fear, favor or hope of reward. It happened that he v,' rot something about Mr. W. L. I'm stead, chairman of the city police and fire commission, whereupon Mr. Um gtcari was accused of saying that if Winters didn't apologize he would beat the out of him. This glad tidings tf great joy was carried to the ears of Mr. Winters, and Mr. Winters, feeling that an official should not be threatening to beat the stuffings out of an inoffensive newspaper man, had Umstead placed under a peace bond in the sum of two hundred dollars. Judge Graham ordered Uimatead to report to him the first Tuesday in each month for a period of six months ard state whether or not he had kept the peace. This of course has all been brought about by politics. You never hear of a man objecting to his works of char it y being criticised. You never hear of a man objecting to have his deeds of humanity recorded on the scroll Hut the man who monkeys with poll tits is always getting into some kind of trouble. Mr. Winters perhaps was lu no danger. Umstead had doubtless THB ONWARD MARCH of Bronchitis, una aoep seated uougns 13 arrested by Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. In those scrofulous condi tions of the blood which in vite Consumption ; in severe, lingering Coughs, and Weak Lungs, which threaten you with this fatal dtaease, and when other help has failed this medicine is a proved remedy. As a blood-cleanser, strength-restorer, and tonic it is sure to benefit. In ail lingering Bronchial and Throat affections, and in every disease that can be reached through the blood, it never falls to benefit or cure, in tablet or liquid form. ' The machinery of the body needs to be well oiled, kept in good condition lust as the automob-Un. steam engine or licycle. Why should tno human neglect his own machinery more than that of his horse or his engine? Yet most people do neglect themselves. Clean the system at least once a week with Dr. Pierce's PJeasant Pellets. What Is 'Uric Ml Everyone has uric acid in the system, tut naturally in small quantities. Ex cessive amonnt is caused by eating too much meat and foods that ferment in stomach. The kidneys, being the filters of the blood, are supposed to separate and throw the poisons out of the system. Weak, tired and overworked kidneys lail to do this, hence the uric acid accu mulates and the urate salts are carried by the blood to the solid tissue structure., causing backache, lumbago, rheuma tism, dropsy, drowsiness, and tired feeling. To overcome the trouble is only a matter of toning up the kidneys, and this is best done by a treatment with Anuric, three times a day. Anuric is a recent discovery of Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y., and can be obtained at any drug store. Experience taught Doctor Pierce that Anuric is a more powerful agent than lithia in dissolving uric acid, and it if then carried out of tlte system. Summer School University of Not th Carolina CHAPEL HILL, N. C. JUNE 12 TO JULY 27 (Write for complete announcement) ABLE FACULTY COMPLETE CURRICULUM MODERATE RATES CREDIT COURSES DELIGHTFUL ENVIRONMENT EXCURSION RATE TICKETS The Summer Law School June 24 to August 24 .. Regular Session Opens Sept. 13 Students who expect ti enter for the first time should complete their ar rangements as early as possible. n n o rse' e We went ycu to know that it's iust "plain, common, horse tense" for you to do your buy ing at ifce stcre with the largest stock. We sell Vulcan Chilled PIows--cant teat 'em, can you? We sell corn planters, mowers, farm tools of all kinds, paints, varnishes, fencing, roofing, Cream Separators, Gas engir.es and practically ever j thing that any GOOD hard ware store carries -nd some things none of them cell. In tome lines of the New Stcck we've pot a little more than we want to carry and we're making good fcixed reductions. Better ask u& about it ntcn here BY OUR BLOOD IVE LBVE If you tire easily, are subject to cold hands or feet if you catch colds readily or have rheumatic pains your blood or circulation is probably at fault and you need iOovp OF NORWEGIAN COD LIVER OIL which is nature's easily-assimilated food, to increase your red corpuscles and charge the blood with life sustaining richness. Scott's creates warmth to throw off colds and gives resistance to prevent sickness. No Alcohol in SCOTTS, Every Druggist hat it. SCOTT made a remark that was imagnlfled, ( aim auer maniHg me lineal 01 course the Judge was bound to take cogni zance of it. We hope, however, that white-winged peace will hover over the Bull City, which is renowned the world around; we hope that Mr. Win ters Will not be beaten into jelly and that he will continue his course of writing news when news is news, and cetainly we hope that Mr. Umstead, in an unguarded moment, will not beat the out of any of the citizens of that live town. Everything. Bead tae paper regular!? United Confederate Veterans Reunion Washington, D. C., June 4-8 Greatly Reduced Round Trip Fares from all points via Southern Railway System For complete information consult nearest South ern Railway agent or write S. E. BURGESS, I).' P. a., CHARLOTTE, N. C. rPAinnn rpnsnn UvJ BOWNE, BloomfiaU. N.J. lets Ideal Pressing Club W. W. WILLIAM', Prop. Satisfaction Guaranteed on all Work. ... ..Prices Reasonable OVER SHARP'S BARBER SHOP Telephone 329 Prompt Service. Best Work Subserl.be today n s e M