Newspapers / The Burnsville Eagle (Burnsville, … / March 2, 1917, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE EAGLE, BURNSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA. OLieED STAIRS ON HER HANDS Too in to Walk Upright. Operation Advised. Saved by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. This woman now raioes chickens and does manualiabor. Read her story: Richmond, Ind.—“For two years I was so sick and weak with troubles . from my age that when going up stairs f had to go very slowly with my hands on the steps, then sit down at the top to rest. The doctor said he thought I siioutd have an operation, and my friends thought I would not live to move into ij ournew house. My daughter asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ComMund as she had taken it with good resufts. I did so, my weakness dis appeared, I gained in strength, moved into our new* home, did all kinds of ^rden work, shoveled dirt, did build ing and cement work, and raised hun dreds of chickens and ducks. I can not say enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and if these facts are useful you may pub lish them for the benefit of other women.”—Mrs, M. O. Johkston,Route D, Box 190, Richmond, Ind. TO KILL RATS, MICE AND COCKROACHES ALWAYS USB STEaRNS’ ELECTRIC PaSTE High Cost of Twine Has Hit U. S. Post Office W ASHTNGTON.—New spare-time employment has been found for the work ers of the post office department in the unraveling of ends of odd bits of twine that come in the po.st offices throughout the country, and in tying the ends together to form halts of twine for tying purposes. Thi.s Is the result of a u'ave of ecdnoiny in the post office depariment. In calling attention to the fact that such spare-time employment is given to idle men in some of the post offices the department states: “It is desired that this work is to be followed throughout the service and that ex cess twine which is accumulated he sent by mail to the nearest large post office or division headquarters of the railway mail service.” The department officials state that owing to the abnormal increase in the price of jute twine, a contract for the supply of wJiich has just been made for a period of one year from November 1, ]916, it is necessary to emphasize previous appeals that care and economy be exer cised In the use of twine, and that it be saved and reused when possible. ■ Clerks have been admonished to use only the amount of twine necessary to tie securely, and the Instructions state that “once around the length and ! twice around the width are sufficient to hold packages of large size. For i smaller packages, less' twine should suffice.” i ! President Wilson Thinks and Writes in Shorthand “MSGffilS" IlCl ON 111!; BOILS No sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation by morning. Get a 10-cent box. Are you keeping your howela, liver, and stomach clean, puri and fresh with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with Saits, Cathartic Pllis, Castor Oil or Purgative Waters? Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg ulate the stomach, remove the sour and fermenting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poisons in the bov/els. A Cascaret to-night will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep—never gripe, sicken or cause any inconvenience, and cost only 10 cents a box from your store. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never have Headache, Biliousness, Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Constipation-. Adv. Found—One Optimist. “Happy man:” “Why so?” “He's already planning a fishing trip for next summer.” “I thought there must be a few per sons In this world who were not wor rying about the high cost of living or the war in Europe.” ACTRESS TELLS SECRET. A well known actress gives the follow ing recipe for gray hair; To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, a small box of Barbo Compound, and % oz. of glycerine. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it at home at very little cost. Full directions for making and use come in each box of Barbo Compound. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and make tt soft and glossy. It will not color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and does not rub off. Adv. ' England's roy-al flying corps has a mechiiniciil section in which are sev eral woimin drivers wlio wetir khaki. Mrs. C. R. Brown of Los Angeles, Cal., owns a eat which is twenty-one years old. THE HIGHEST OUALITY SPAGHETTI 36 Rfdpe Book Fne SKINNER MFC. CO.. OMAHA. U.SA tASetST MACWOHI FACTORY W AMtBICA if you have a cheap stomach anu can not eat what you want without suffering the tortures of dyspepsia. If you have headaches and feel mean all over. If your liver and bowels are on & strike it Is up to you to get those or gans in proper condition to receive and assimilate food by at once using Green’s August Flower Which for 51 years has been a favorite household remedy In many thousands of homes for all stomach disorders, acid eructation, nervous indigestion, constipation and biliousness. 25c and 7ScsIzesat alTOruggistsand Dealers. Have you RHEUMATISM Lumbago or Gout? OS THS ISBIDE PEIS bubebatibb ok THZ OETSIDB” At All DroggUtB Jm. Baily & Sod, Wboittale DitlribBtort Baltimore, Md. COLORED PEOPLE can have nice, long, straight hulr by using Cxeienfo Quinine Pomade, which is H Hair Grower, not a Kinky Hair remover. You can see the results by using several times. Try a package. I’rice 21)0 at all drug stores or by mail on receipt of stamps or coin. Agents wanted everywhere. Write for par ticulars. Exelento Medicine Co., At lanta, Ga. FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS Early Jersey and Charleston Wakefield, Suc cession and Flat Dutch, by express, 500, Sl.CO, 1.000, $1.50, 5,000, at $1.25. Satisfaction guar anteed. Postpaid 25o per 100. D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE. S. C APPENDICITIS ■SSSSs-SSrII F ew persons perhaps know that among his varied accomplishments Presi dent Wilson combines a complete knowledge of shorthand. Mr. Wilson writes shorthand with such great accuracy,„ legibility and skill that almost anybody with' an elementary knowl edge of shorthand can read- his out lines. Many of Mr. Wilson’s most fa mous speeches and most notable state papers have been thought out first in shorthand on paper and later written on the typewriter by the president’s own hand. His recent message to congress was fii-st prepared in this President Wilson thinks in short hand. He keeps small pads of paper always at hand upon which ho jots down eon.stantly in shorthand the ideas that come to him. It is almost reflex action with him. In this way he is able to form and in.stantly record subtleties of thought and delicate shades of expression that otherwise might escape him. The famous first Lusitania note, for example, with its finished expression and skilled rhetoric, was first pre pared in shorthand in tlie privacy of the president’s study. Iii its prepai-atioii he passed three days li^ strict seclusion, silently studying the grave aspects of the German-Ainerieun situation, and had no communication with anyone save. Mr. Tumulty, his secretary. In the White tiou-se it is quite usual to see the desks of the executive offices covered with pages of shorthand; they are almost as common as sheets of t.vpewritiug, for not' only does the president employ this brief mode of writing, but Mr. Tumulty and the assistant -secretaries use it. Frequently the president hands his notes over to a stenographer, who can read them as readily'-as his own shorthand. President Wilson first studied .shorthand in his collegiate days, and has used it throughout his career. He is the second of the presidents of the I'nited States to u.se the “winged art.” Nearly loO years ago James Madison, who later served two consecutive terms iu the White House, employed short hand in reporting the deliberations of the ever-memorable federal convention at Philadelphia, which gave us the system of constitutional government. Warning About Water Pipes. Now Is the time that fires are caused by householders attempting to thaw out service pipes by burning oil-.soaked rags ami using other Ill-advised meth ods in which an open fiiime is used. The proper way for the householder to restore an Ice-clogged pipe to serv ice is to wrap it with clolli and'pour hot water upon it, or, if the freezing l.s too severe to yield to this treatment, the best plan Is to send fT>r a plumber. Apparently this Is a minor detail, but attention to it may prevent needless fire loss running into thousands of dol lars.—Engineering Record. Consider Form of Government for New Possessions 8. DUIiBUIl.> ST.,CUICi60 C REATION of a form of government for the Danish West Indies is a legis lative task which will eo«front congress after ratifications of the treaty providing for their acquirement have been exchanged between the United State.s and Denmark. Congress wilK await, however, a note from the sec retary of state'nanouncing the comple tion of diplomatic exchanges before undertaking to appropiiate the money. Administration lenders expect that the stall? department Mill conclude the ne.gotiations in time to include the purchase price In the general de ficiency appropriation bill at this ses sion But they doubt that any effort will be made by this congress to create the permanent form of govern ment to be provided for this important territorial acquisition to the United States. 'The inhabitants thmseh'es have expressed a desire 'for full citizenship. Before taking possession of the i.shinds there are many details involved in the transfer to be worked out by the executive departmeni of the govern ment. involving'contracts and business concession? in the islands which the treaty guaranteed M-ould be continued. These u-ill be adjusted, in all prob ability, together with a temporary form of government for the islands, which would prevail pending congressional action. Senators who are particulariy interested in the acquirement of the Danish islands point to Porto Rico as an example that might be followed in working out the political destiny of those new American possessions. When Porto Hico m-os ceded to the United States in 1898 it was under a military form of government until the passage of the Foraker act in 1900. A Trial Gave Instant Relief—Never Disappoints —Great Kidney Remedy Being broken down in health, suffering M'ith kidney trouble, deBpairing of ever being well again, I ■was advised by a friend to try Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root which gave me instant relief, and after using Beveral bottles, 1 am now sound and well, and can safely leeommentl Swamp-Root to anyone suffering with back or kidney troubles. I also had rheumatism, and I have had more relief fi-om Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root than any other remedy. A sufficient trial ■will convince anybody of the merits of Swamp-Root. Yours very trulv. P. K- NEI^ON, Nlurphy, N. C. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 17th day of July, 1909. EDMUND B. NORVKLL, Notary Public, Cherokee County, N. C. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yon Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer i Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bot tle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of .valuable infor mation. telling about the kidneys and blad der. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-oent and one- dollar size bottles for sale at all drug ■tores.—Adv. Inopportune. “Do you subscribe to the theory tliat there is something good in the worst of us?” asked the philosophical person. “Yes,” replied the practical man, "but 1 don’t propose, to waste any of my time trying to find nut what it is Mhon a footpad ))'okes a iiistol In my face and tuli.s me to hand over my GIRLS! OiRLS! TRY IT, BEAUTIFY YQOR HAIR “Little White House” Headquarters of Suffragists T he Congressional union recently celebrated its first anniversary in its new home, Cameron House, 21. Madison place, opposite Lafayette park, the building which is now the national headquarters of the movement to enfranchise M-omen through the pas sage of the Susan B. Anthony amend ment. ^ The name “Little White House” ' by Mliich this stately re.sldence is familiarly knoum, has not been be stowed upon it by chance, for during its nearly 00 years of existence it has heon the center from uhich have ra diated many a plan and program af fecting the nation’s destinies. Built in 1828 by Benjamin Ogle Tayloe, tlie house is filled Mith the traditions of its many occupants—traditions ■which have become a vital part of Wa-shington’s history. In the language of the time. 3If. and Mrs. Tayloe dispensed a “liberal and elegant hospitality” and each succeeding host and hostess have carried out the reputation establi.shed at that early day. Among its honored guests have been John Quincy Adams, who often dropped in Informally; Presidents I^arri.son, Fillmore and Taylor, this being the last house Mdiich President Taylor visited in Washington before his death; the statesmen, Webster, Clay, Cass and Calhoun; the historians, Pres cott, Bancroft and Washington Irving; Senator Donald Cameron of Pennsyl vania and Vice President Hobart, and Senator Mark Hanna, who, over the cozy breakfast table, often entertained President McKinley M'liile helping liim to plan out the camp.nign of 1900. Miss Ruth Hanna, now Mrs. Medill McCormick of Chicago, spent part of her girlhood there. ftOME Helps MEANS LOOKING INTO FUTURE Expert Who Has Made a Study of City Planning Outlines Objects Sought to Be Obtained. Although a wide interest in the sub ject of city planning is manifest to day, both in Euroi)e and America, there appears to be uncertainty as to what it precisely is. According to a distinguished authority vvliuni Mr. Leu-is quotes: “City planning simply means getting ready for tlie future in city growth. It Is the guidance into proper channels of a coinmuhity’s im pulses toward a larger amt broader life. On the face of It, it has to do M'llh things physical—the laying out of streets and parks and rnpid-tran.^it lines. But its real signieafiiice is far deeper; u proper city plan has a pow erful influence for good upon the men tal and moral development of the peo ple. It is the firm base for the build ing of a healthy and happy com munity.” Mr. LeM’ls studies lii turn, the incep tion and development of this city plan ning movement emphasizing the need of intru.sting its successful executive to “duly authorized city officials or a special conmiissioner created for the purpose,” the correction of mistakes, and the general problems of transpor tation. In the delightful chapter. “Gar den Cities,” he declares that the gar den city movement goes much further than to provide attractive homes for those who live in or near large cities or centers of industry. "It is really a protest against the extreme central ization M'liich has lately been the ten dency in city development.” • Later chapters are devoted to a comparison of city planning legislation in England, Germany and the United States, the municipal progress made under this legislation, methods of financing a city plan, and various municipal land poli cies. Having Indicated in the body of his book “what a city plan is. Iiom- it is developed, the various problems to be solved and the coiidilions Mhich It is necessary to pi-ovide for or guard against,” Mr. Leuis points out in his concluding chapters the opportunities and responsibilities of the modern ine- chanieal engineer, mIio is today mak ing “the most substantial contribution towai’d the orderly develoiiment and admiuisti'alion of our cities.” Indeed, he declares the basic purpose of his book to be “to bring home to them this responsibility and awaken in them n realization of 1his oiiportunity.”— The I’lannlng of the Modci'n City. A Review of the Principles Governing City Planning. By Nelson P. Lewis. CONCRETE GROWS IN FAVOR Pi\}Hk Family three membere you should know if you desire to enjoy life. 1. The popular liquid form of Penina—the reliable tonic of the American household, with a long history of success in treating all catarrhal difficuldes. 2. The tablet form, which is made after the same formulary and is more convenient for many. 3. Manalin. the ideal laxative, by the regular use of ■ ■ ■ be overcome and thousands have received beoetic from the Lost Opportunity. “I see au old gentleman approach ing. He wears a Silk hat and seems absorbed in a paiupbiet lie is rending. Further doun the street several small boys are waifing with siioM'balls in their hands. What Mill liappon?” "Nothing. I knoM- sometliing those small boys evidently don't Uiiom', The old gentleman has to walk only about ten feet before he M'ill turn into his OM'ii hou.se, Mhere, 1 assure yoti, lie M-ill be quite safe.” With the Fingers! Says Corns Lift Out Without Any Pain Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or. any kind of a corn can shortly be lifted right out with the fingers if you M’ill apply on the corn a few drops of freezone, says a Cincinnati authority. At little cost one can get a small bot tle of freezone at any drug store, M’hlch will posiflvely rid one's feet of every corn or callus M-lthout .pain or sore ness or the danger of infection. This new drug is an ether compound, and dries the moment it Is applied and does not inflame or even irritate the surrounding skin. Just think: You can lift off your corns and calluses now without a bit of pain or sorenes.s. If your druggist hasn’t freezone he can .easily get a small bottle for you from his M'holesale drug house.—adv. A Practical Plan. “That brisk young iiiau mIio just now M'ent out is a sen t of phiianliiro- pist,” said tbc custodian of a sky'.-rap- er. “He’s behind a movenu’iit to get aged scrubM’onian off tlieir knees.” “Well, M'ell! Hum' does he propose to go about it?” “His plan is quite simple. He’s sell ing a mop Mith a-long hamiie.” CONDENSATIONS New York may prosecute property OM’ners for cost of fighting fires Mdiere fire prevention laM’s have not been obeyed. The larger part of Mexico consists of an elevated plateau. M-ith mountains on the east and west. This plateau is of volcanic origin. A Danish nerve spociali.st places con valescent patients on top of n piano :o that they may he benefited by its • ibration os it is played. Tennis courts made of rubber- have been invented by an Englishman. Under normal conditions ten inches of snow M-ill yield one inch of Mater. A tM'o-M’heeled automobile th.at Is balanced by a gyroscope has been in vented by a Russian engineer. Dr. .Tohn Qnackenbosf of East An dover, N. H.. has used the same row boat on Highland lake 44 years. NeM- York may prosecute property oM’iiers for cost of fighting fires M'here fire-prevention lau-s have not been obeyed. Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur iant and Remove Dandruff—Real Surprise for '^ou. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus trous and beautiful as a ?oung girl’s after a "Danderine hair cleanse.” Just try this—moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draM’ It through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. ’This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, D^derine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig orates the scalp, forever stopping itch ing and falling hair. But what will please you most ■will be after a few weeks’ use when you will actually see new hair—fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair—growing all ovir the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it, surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any store and just try it. Adv. Use of That Material In House Con struction Is Becoming Popular With All Classes of Builders. Since the advent of the concrete block industry, some rapid steps have been made In house construction. The special facings which It is pos.-iible to apply 1o the concrete blocks make them a solution of almost any problem in house building M’here something special is desired in finish. By the use of white cement in connection with suitable coloring material almost any shade or tint may be obtained and a very close imitation of highly expensive sto:ie may he built at a reasonal)le. cost. Marble, granite, sandstone and lime stone may be imitated M-iUi such ex actness that there is no advantage gained in the use of the true material A house just put up in WatertoM-u is an example of the beautiful effecL M-hich may be obtained by tiic use of special face concrete blocks applied to the construction of the porch and chim ney of a frame house. Tlie facing used in this case is intended to imitate M’hite marble. This facing consists of a mor tar made of some brand of wlilte cement and marble chippings.—Boston Ilcraid. Unprofitable. Loll—One never loses iinytliiiig by keei)ing iiii engagement punctually. Scott-^Except half an hour’s time M-aiting for the oilier felloM-.—Chicago Herald. 8'TTie folks think that castor oil should follow a dose of VermifuEe. Not so with Di'. Peery's “Dead Shot.” A single dose not only eradicates Worms or Tapeworm, but tones up the digestion as well. Adv. Acquiescence. “I’d like to see you try to kiss me.” “Well, you know, I aRvays try to do nytliing you like.” The Quinine That Does Not Affect The Head Becaaee of He toolo and lazatiTe eSecc, Laxallve Bromo Qnlnlne can be Wken bj anyone without irefs^oneacbbox B. W- QROVH'S Tiic war in Europe has made it nec essary to employ women nt night In the factories of England. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the orig inal little liver pills put up 40 years ago. They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv. Vivien Frederick is one of the pret tiest actresses in NeM- York. Common Sense Penal Treatment. Daylou, O., used to treat Its workhouse pi'isoucrs as most other cities treat them—that is, put them In a cell and let them stay there in idleness, caling poor food at the expense, of the city until their terms had expired. Under the ' commission the workhouse has been made clean and all the prisoners given M ork In tlie open air. Tlie woiu- an prisoners have l)oen set to work making toM-els and bed clothing. Mule prisoners are taken oiildoors and used for city work as day laborers. Tiie re sult is that the city gets the benefit of the prisoners’ work and tlie prisoner gets the moral and pliy.sical advantage »i£ outdoor exercise.—Exchange. Waning Tree Life. Do not forget that old trees starve lo de.ith just as surely as young trees, lliough by reason of greater bulk and a I'ar-reat’hlng root system they do not so quickly show the need of food nor so quickly succumb. Stable manure dug or ploMCd in 20 or more feet around the tree Mill do as much good as anything. Conifers that are Irimnied up fj’oui the bottom and the soil raked clean or somh lo grass right up to the trunk genprally undergo- a sloM’ but sure loss of vigor. Soil should be occasionally enriched and dug up d(^I)ly and the needles ahvays left for a iffulch. th’ . Hirai “Or man Diggers is on a hay-rum Jag.” “Drab th’ cuss! If he'd stick ter lemon extract fur drinkin’ purposes, lie MOuldn't stir up th’ neighbors so.” Information. “Even if the suffragettes had their way, your Mife M ould come to }’ou lor information b-foi'e she M'ont to vote.” “Yes, she M’iuid prol)ably ask me if lier hat was on straight.” ilGMON, GAS “Rape’s Diapepsin’^ cures sick, sour stomachs in five minutes —Time It! “Really does” put bad stomachs in order—"really does” overcome indiges tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes—that—just that—makes Pape's Dlapepsin the lar gest selling stomach regulator in the world. It what you eat ferments Into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and arcid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, re member the moment "Pape's Diapep- sin” comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It’s truly astonishing—almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large flfty-cent case of Pape’s Dla- pepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction. It’s worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stom achs regulated. It belongs In your home—should always be kept handy in case of sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night- It’s the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world.—Adv. Taxing His Patience. “So you arc trying life on the farm? “No,” replied tlie former city dM’ell- r. "I’m folloM-iiig some rules I read 1 a bonk and life on the farm is trying V- —-... both these remedies that they are a recognized part of the equipment of every careful household. THE PERUNA COMPANY OUa Honest. “rie's honest, aiiyhoM'.” "What makes you think so?” ‘T asked him the other day if he thought peace M'as near in Europe and lie said right off the bat that he didn’t kiioM- fi blamed thing about it.” INSIST ON YAM NUTS— Up-to-date grocers have them—the new food with an “unforgetable fiavor,” made from Southern yams. Try YAM NUTS once, they’ll win you sure. The Williami Co., Greenville, S. C. Adv. Bang! “Did you knoM’ that the Steenth Na tional bank has busted?” “Yes: I heard the report.” IndigcB dlsagreeabl- and mptoma. Wrighl’i itimulate th« dlKCt- 1 naturally. Adv. In 'Vieniia a girl can be insured against being an old maid. WHAT IS UX-FOS LAX-FOS Is an Improved Gascara (a tonic-laxative) Pleasant to take In LAX-FOS the Cascara is improved by the addition of certain harmless chem icals wbiclr increase the ^Bciency of the Cascara, making it better than ordinary Cascara LAX-FOS is pleasant to take and does not gripe nor disturb stomach. Adapted to children as well as adults. Just try one bottle for constipation. 50& Backache Yager’s Liniment is excel lent for any kind of pain or congestion. It quickly re lieves backache and rheu matic pains, and is a splen did remedy for NeurMgia, Sciatica, chest pains, sprains, strains, swellings and en largements. it Keep s bottle in your home tor of the sort. The 25 cent bottle of Yager’i much as the usual bottle of Uoi- ment soldfor that price. AT ALL DEALERS LlMlHiNU ECZEMA! For sale by all drug Bl or by mall from the A. B. Richards Medicine Co., ‘‘ROUGHonRATS”g| pie outdoors. 1 W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 4-1917. ,TO LIVE LONG! A recipe, given by a famous physician for long life was: " Keep the kidneys in good order! Try to eliminate thru the skin and intestines the poisons that otherwise clog the kidneys. Avoid eat ing meat as much as possible; avoid too niucli salt, alcohol, te.t. Try a milk and vegetable diet. Drink plenty of water, and exercise so you sweat —the skin helps to eliminate the toxic poisons and uric acid.” For (hose past middle life, for those easily recognized symptoms.of inflam mation, as backaclle, scalding "water,” or if uric acid in the blood has caused rheumatism, "rusty” joints, stiffness, get Anuric at the drug store. This is a wonderful eliminator of uric acid and tvas discovered by Dr. Pierce of Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. If your druggist does not keep it send 10 cents to Dr. Pierce for trial package and you will find that it is many times more potent than lithia and that it dissolves uric acid as hot water does sugar. NOTHING STANDS AS HIGH, as a remedy J . for every womanly ailment, A as Dr. Pierce’s Favorite If Prescription. It’s the only K medicine for women certain in its effects. V "Favorite Prescription” is I an invigorating, restorative / tonic, a soothing 'and k strengthening nervine, and K a complete cure for all tho » functional derangements, ©painful disorders, and W chronic weaknesses peculiar f to tho sex. ' For young girls ju?t > entering M'imanhood; for j women a\ the critical time; I nursing mothers; andeocry woman who j is "run-down,” tired or overworked—it is a special, safe, and certain help. 1 Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels, : Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take ; as candy. 1 How to preserve' health and beauty is told in Doctor Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. It is free. Send Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., four dimes, or stamps, to cover wrapping and mailing. VflMTOISMirH's |f f^lLLlONK Sold for 47 years. For NIalaria, Ohills and F'ever. .Also a F"ine General Strengthening nPonic. SOc and 91.00 it all Dr&{ .Stans FRESH - CRISP 'WHOLESOME* DELICIOUS THESAHITARY METHdDS AVPLIEO IN THE TIAKING OP THCaS BISCUITS MAKE THEM THE STANDARDEXCELLENCE PtoUr lus 9tm, or if not hr shoid4. cAsk him or write as qtving his noais. CMATTAKOOGA BAKERY
The Burnsville Eagle (Burnsville, N.C.)
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March 2, 1917, edition 1
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