The Douglas enterprise. (Douglas, Ga.) 1905-current, November 25, 1916, Image 9

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h KtmnKKAbu STATEMENT Mrs. Sheldon Spent SI9OO for Treatment Without Bene fit. Finally Made Well by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound. Englewood, 111. - “While going through the Change of Life I suffered 111 11 ■ ILLU-U U till i headaches,ner vousness flashes of i fyl heat, and I suffered so much 1 did not know what I was |P?gdoing at times. I " Jit ™ s P ent SI9OO on doc- I *T tors and not one did I. good. Ono day a lady called at yli house and said \. * s ” e h & d been as sick 1 if /// a 8 1 was at one time, 1 ! V*?nd Lydia E. Pink £ 7 -'ham’s Vegetable Compound made her well, so I took it and now lam just as well as I ever was I cannot understand why women don’t see how much pain and suffering thev would escape by taking your medicine. 1 cannot praise it enough for it saved my life and kept me from the Insane Hospital —Mrs. E. Sheldon, 5657 S. Halsted St, Englewood, 111. Physicians undoubtedly did their best, battled with this case steadily and could do no more, but often the most scientific treatment is surpassed by the medicinal properties of the good old fashioned roots and herbs contained in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If any complication exists it pays to write the Lydia E. Pink liam Medicine Co., Lynn. Muss., for special free advice. Don’t Persecute Your Bowels Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They are brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Trv^W^. CARTER’S LITTLE liver pills Purely vegetable. Art JB£i&Ski ol -JP gently on the liver, Lfl RT cRS eliminate bile, anc /KgfeVnMfl hsitti r soothe the delicate jg?! ' membrane of thejggißgjfiWr SIV E R Conaipation jy^ilLAS. ache and Indigestion, aa millions know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature ■* COLD iff HEAD B CATARRH INSTANTLY BEUEVEO BY THE OLD DR MARSHALL’S CATARRH SNUFF *7 »T tu DRUG STORES OS SENT PREPAID at RjIUIAMS MFC. cp„ CIEYEUR3 0 erlF"" hair balsam A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and * Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. „| 60c. and gI.OQ at Drurfistg. [ Every W oman W ants] ANTISEPTIC POWDER FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved in water for douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam mation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for ten years. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, sore throat and sore eyes. Economical. Hu extraordinary cleansing and germicidal power. Sample Free. 50c. all druggists, or postpaid by Has Two Hats Now. “I found such a wonderful bargain,” said Mrs. Flatter. ‘‘What was it?” asked her husband, a resident of Back Bay. “You know I went downtown to buy a hat. Well, just as 1 got in the st - e they put up a sign, ‘All hats at ht. ? price !’ ” “So you only had to spend half of the money you intended.” “Oh, no, I bought two hats instead of one.” You may have noticed that the friends who are willing to lend you money are those who have no money to lend. Fashionable charity keeps the left hand posted as to the operations of the right. Feel Achy All Over ? To ache all over In damp weath er, or after taking a cold, isn’t nat ural, and often indicates kidney weakness. Uric acid causes many queer aches, pains and disorders of the organs. Well kidneys keep uric acid down. Tired, dizzy, nervous people would do well to try Doan’s Kidney Pills. They stimulate the kidneys to activity and so help clear the blood of irritating poisons. A Georgia Case Mrs. Sabra Burgess, Toccoa, Ga., says: "I had trouble with my kidneys soon followed bv rheumatic pain and uric acid poisoning. My back was weak / and painful and the / mAMtiP rheumatic pains ex- VjJjjr tended from my head Ml Wit through my shoulders sws 11 liiwj and into my limbs Hi Hj Doctors didn’t help me si V and I was in despair. ■/ i Finally, I took Doan’s ZU II ji Kidney Pills and five boxes rid me of the Get Doan’* at Aar Store, 60c a Bos DOAN’S V.VY FOSTER-MDLBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. Y. imruKinm nano THE WORLD OVER Happenings of This and Other Nations For Seven Days Are Given. THE NEWS OF THE SOUTH What Is Taking Place in the South land Will Be Found In Brief Paragraphs. Washington It is announced here that there is a probability that Germany will pay for sunken ships carrying American citizens and produce, if it established that the ships were sailing legally un der the American flag. Germany has informed the United States that the sinking of the Marina on October 28 will be thoroughly in vestigated. A Stockholm, Sweden, dispatch an nounces that there wil be no 1916 No bel prize awarded. The beet sugar output in the United States this year is stated to be the largest in the history of the country. A London dispatch says that the Pe ninsula and Oriental liner Arabia re ceived no warning from the submarine which sank her in the Mediterranean on November 6. All the 437 passengers, including 169 women and children, and all the crew, with the exception of two engineers, who were killed by the ex plosion, were saved by vessels which went to the rescue. A Cambridge, Mass., dispatch says that Paul Danner of that city, an American citizen, was a passenger on board the British steamer sunk in the Mediterranean by a submarine. Full information regarding the tor pedoing of the British passenger liner Arabia is awaited at the state depart ment with concern. Naval Lieutenants Luther Welsh and C. K. Bronson were killed at Indian Head, Md., by the premature explosion of an aeroplane bomb while testing bombs designed for use against war vessels. Witnesses saw the airplane break in two and fall Into the Potomac river. A verdict of $150,000 in favor of the United States government was return ed by a jury in the federal court at New York in a suit instituted against a German exporting firm, being charg ed with undervaluing a shipment of glove leather. The Union Pacific Railroad company has filed suit in the federal court at Omaha, Neb., to test the constitution ality of the eight-hour law recently passed by congress and known as the Adamson act. The bill of complaint alleges that the law is unconstitu tional, citing the fifth amendment to the constitution as being the section it is alleged will be violated if the law becomes effective. The Anti-Saloon League reports that five more states have been added to the dry column —Michigan, Montan, South Dakota, Utah and Nebraska; Michigan by 80,000. It is stated that with the addition of the five states claimed to have shifted to the dry column, one-half of the United States is now legally “dry.” In what was said to be the first suit ever begun in the Supreme court by a foreign nation against one of the United States, attorneys for Cuba asked the Supreme court for leave to file an original petition against the state of North Carolina to secure payment of bonds valued at $2,186,- 000 subscribed by North Carolina to aid railroad construction in that state nearly fifty years ago. President Wilson declares himself as favoring legislation providing for the appointment of postmasters of all classes through competitive civil ser vice examinations. A Douglas, Ariz., dispatch announc es that the eight-hour working day in Sonora, Mexico, is in effect in the large mines of the state. European War Driving against the center of the Russian line on the eastern front, the Germans have gained possession of Russian positions on a front of about two and a half miles. This is admit ted by ePtrograd. The advance of the Russo-Rouman ian troops in the Dobrudja sector con tinues. On the Transylvanla-Roumania front the Roumanians have been pushed back by Archduke Charles, who has as sumed command. The Austrians are now on the offen sive in the Georgeny mountains, and have recovered all lost positions. Seventy air fights are reported to have taken place in France in one day. It is reported that ten German machines were shot down. The undersea merchantman, the Deutschaldn, plying between the Ger many and the United States, is about ready to leave New London, Conn., for her return trip home. It is announced that the war is cost ing France twenty-one millicn dollars a day. A Berlin dispatch announces that Polish provinces occupied by troops of the central powers were the scene, November 5, of a great and momen tous historic event. Germany and Austria-Hungary, by joint action, pro claimed Warsaw and Lublin, the King dom of Poland, and re-established the right of the Polish nation to control its own destinies, to live an independ ent national life and to give itself by chosen representatives of the na tion. UUUiLfb till A A (ViILJ ( MUk utu n, T - There were no casualties. _ After a week or more of doubt con cerning operations in the Dobrudja region of Roumania, where the Teu tonic allies had been marching almost unimpeded northward from the Black sea to the Danube, comes the report that the Roumanians have taken the offensive, probably aided by Russians, and compelled the enemy to retreat All along the battle line in France between the Somme and Ancre rivers the Germans are tenaciously disputing attempts by the British and French to gain further ground. London admits that the British were compelled to give back to the Ger mans ground the British previously won at the Butte de Warlencourt. Rome reports that the Austrians are bringing up heavy reinforcements on the battle front north of Trieste. Here the Austrians apparently have taken the offensive, but nowhere have they been able to regain any of their lost positions. Mexican News Another form of torture is being used by Villa and his bandits —instead of cutting off the ears of the captured Carranza soldiers, he is branding them with redhot irons. As no news has been received for many days of the Americans known to have been in the Parral and Magis tral districts, fears for their safety have increased. Ten Americans were known to have been in Parral before its evacuation. Eight Americans and other foreign ers, it is reported, have been cut off fro mcommunication with the United States in the Magistral mines. A Mexican refugee from Chihuahua City arriving in El Paso says that the Villa bandits soaked the hair of two Mexican women in oil and burned them at Santa Rosalia on October 26. Reports are being circulated in El Paso to the effect that one of Villa’s commanders, General Uribe, says he intends to kill all Americans and Chi nese who are caught by him. General Carranza announces that he will not resign as “first chief” becauso of his candidacy for the presidency of the Mexican republtc. General Carranza makes the state ment that up to the present time the. relations between the United States and Mexico have not been strained. Evacuation of Chihuahua City by the Carranza forces is not believed at all probable, and if a raid is made by the Villa forces on that place, General Trevino believes the garri son will repulse them. General Trevino says that more than eight thousand seasoned fighters garrison Chihuahua City, and that the fortifications cannot be overcome by the light guns in the hands of the Villa bandits. The mining companies of Mexico have indicated to their men that work ing more than six days a week is optional with them. Parral has been abandoned by the Carranza garrison, under command of Gen. Luis Herrera, according to pas sengers from Chihuahua City arriving in Juarez. Domestic One of the largest distilleries ever found in Georgia was destroyed near Marietta Ga. by deputy revenue offi cers. There were no arrests. A Chicago dispatch announces that all railroads may fight the Adamson eight-hour alw. A negro wife slayer after being cor nered by policemen took his own life in Macon, Ga. A ten thousand dollar monuument to the memory of Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederacy, will be erected at his birthplace in Fairfield, Kentucky. Governor Manning of South Caroli na sent a posse of the National Guard to Anderson, S. C., to quell alleged rioting strikers. The lives of from thirty to forty per sons were lost when a crowded pas senger car of the Boston Elevated Street railway plunged through an open drawbridge into Fort Point chan nel, just outside the South station ter minal, Boston, Mass. Twelve persons were rescued from the water by fire boats and tugs. The motorman of the car asserts that the accident was due to the fact that there was no light on the gates protecting the opening. He is under arrest. The Snohomish county authorities, Washington, assisted by the Seattle po lice, in which custody 289 persons are held in connection with the fatal clash between members of the Industrial Workers of the World and a posse of Everett, Wash., citizens, continued their efforts to identify from among the prisoners the men who actually en gaged in the shooting. At least six men were killed and forty others wounded in a fight at the Everett City wharf (state of Wash ington, between 250 members of the Industrial Workers of the World and a posse of 150 citizens. The Indus trial Workers retreated to Seattle whence they came. The Pisgah national forest in west ern North Carolina has been made a federal game preserve under a proc lamation just issued by the president. This is the first federal game pre serve of its kind to be created east of the Mississippi. Thirty miners perished in the Bes sie mine disaster, Birmingham, Ala., November 4. Henry Ward Ranger, one of the best known American landscape artists, is dead at his home in New York City. His best known picture is "The To;, of the Hill,” which is in the Corco ran gallery at Washington. KIDNEY DISEASES There is only one medicine that really stands out 'pre-eminent as a remedy for diseases of the kidneys, liver and bladder. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root stands the highest for the reason that it Las proven to be just the remedy needed in thousands upon thousands of even the most distress ing cases. Swamp-Root, a physician’s pre scription for special diseases, makes friends quickly because its mild and immediate ef fect is soon realized in most cases. It is a gentle, healing vegetable compound. Start treatment at once. Sold at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes—fifty cents and one dollar. ITowever, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. The Wooden Cross. Writing to a student at Yale, a mem ber of the American ambulance corps in Francfe says: “Two of the Ameri can aviators have gotten the ‘wooden cross’ in the past week. We have just heard that Bill Thaw, ex-Yale ’ls, was killed a few days ago. It did not come out in the papers.” There is the Iron cross of the first class, and the iron cross of the second class, the Victoria cross, the cross of the Legion of Honor—all of those are decorations given by the war chiefs of Europe. But the “wooden cross” —that costs more than all others. That is the decoration'given by Moloch.—Chat tanooga News. * MOTHER'S JOY SALVE for Colds, Croup, Pneumonia and Asthma ; GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT for Neuralgia, Rheumatism and Sprains. For sale by all Druggists. GOOSE GREASE COMPANY. MFR'S., Greensboro, N. C. —Adv. She Did. Bob —You look sweet enough to eat 1 Gertie —I do eat. Where shall we go?—London Answers. TKIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH. You will look ten years younger if you darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by using “La Creole" Hair Dressing.—Adv An old bachelor observes that mar ried men are often as anxious to get out of matrimony as single fools are to get in. No man is ever perfectly sure of a girl’s love until she declares that she hates him. One mistake many women make in buying coffee You know how hard it is to get a coffee which really satisfies you. You know how seldom } r ou can find a coffee which has the same fine taste and strength every morning ! It can be done. You can do it if, when you buy coffee, you are careful not to make the mistakes so many women make. Read the ex periences below —you yourself have undoubtedly had one or both of them. Beware of loose coffee Are you buying coffee which you get loose, coffee which hasn’t been protected by a sealed package ? Are you afraid that it isn’t clear ? Has it lost its aroma? Are you often disappointed in its strength ? It isn’t the grocer’s fault. With loose coffee he can’t be sure that it S s the same kind he got before. You always run the risk of getting different coffee every time you buy. And even if the coffee itself were the same, it can’t be kept “loose” without losing its strength and flavor. In packages—protected! You can do away with every one of these disappointments by ordering the coffee which over one million other families drink. Arbuckles’ Coffee is such good coffee that way back in the sixties, when all other coffees on the market were loose and unprotected, Arbuckle Bros, protected theirs in sealed packages. This sealed package keeps the coffee’s strength, and guards it from moisture and store odors. Most important of all, it makes it easy for you to be sure that you are getting the same good coffee every time you buy. The second mistake women make Old coffee with new name* Are you continually being offered the same old coffee under new names ? Under all sorts of new blends ? Did you ever stop to think of the hundreds of coffees which come and go on the market? And that all of these have tried to turn women away from Arbuckles’ Coffee ? Arbuckles* is the coffee which has gone right out, always under its own name, never disguised, and held its users simply on the wonderful value it gave. You know what good value a coffee must be to do this against the competition of all the other coffees in America! Used in a million home* Settle, for all time, your coffee problem, by giving your family the only coffee which over a million families have proved to have the real coffee teste they want. When you get Arbuckles’ Coffee you get an entirely dif ferent coffee. No other coffee goes through the same process —in no other coffee can you get the same good flavor. The result of the care Arbuckle Brothers take in selecting it, in roasting and in packaging it, gives you an entirely different coffee from any other on the market. Order it from your grocer today. He has it, in either the Whole Bean or the new Ground. Try it. See why it is by far the most popular coffee in America. Arbuckle Brothers. 71- At 2 Water St., New York. UHLUIIILL l!IJ1l\LU IUU UIUI\, UUIIi IT'S MERCURY AND SALIVATES Straighten Up! Don’t Lose a Day’s Wo#k! Clean Your Sluggish Liver and Bowels With “Dodson's Liver Tone.” Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. Take a dose of the vile, dangerous drug to night and tomorrow you may lose a day’s work. Calomel Is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it comes into contact with sour bile crashes into it, break ing it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you feel sluggish and “all knocked out,” if your liver is torpid and bowels consti pated or you have headache, dizziness, eoated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour, just try a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone. Here’s my guarantee—Go to any drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone. Take a Spoonful tonight and if it doesn’t Equal to Emergencies. The cook hud a beau, and Robert was very much interested in him. “Why does that man sit there and never say anything?’ he asked. “He does be talkin’ when you uns ain’t there, lie’s me own company, and you’re not invited,” said the cook. “Well, excuse me,” said Robert, who could take a hint, "but I thought may be you might like someone you knew stay around if he wasn’t nice to you.” “Gowan,” exclaimed the cook. “What’s me two fists for?” Acid Stomach, Heartburn and Nausea quickly disappear with the use of Wright’s Indian Vegetable rills. Send for trial box to VI Pearl St., New York. Adv. A Hint. HHe —I love all kinds of birds. She —I don’t. I hate a jay—Balti- more American. Many a girl looks to money in a matrimonial alliance because she is unable to find anything else worth having. 47* mfor47 y<m For Ifef iil iLMijFiil §i€J Malaria, Chills & Fever. pflPJv Also a Fine General If (PllTonic s rs:r Drue Stores* straighten you right up and make you feel fine and vigorous by morning I want you to go back to the store and get your money. Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel be cause it is real liver medicine; entire ly vegetable, therefore it cannot sali vate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dodson’s Liver Tone will put your slug gish liver to work and clean your bow els of that sour bile and constipated waste which is clogging your system and making you feel miserable. I guar antee that, a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone will keep your entire family feel ing fine for months. Give it to your children. It is harmless; doesn’t gripe and they like its pleasant taste.—Adv. The Difference. Uncle Ezra—So ye’ve just been down to New York, Eben? What’s the differ ence between a big town and a little one? Uncle Eben —Wal, in a big one the crowd follows the fire engine to find out where the fire is, and in a little one the lire engine follows the crowd to find out where it is. IMITATION IS SINCEREST FLATTERY but like counterfeit money the imita tion has not the worth of the original. Insist on “La Creole” Hair Dressing—• it s the original. Darkens your hair in the natural way, but contains no dye, Price fl.OO.—Adv. Horticultural Truth. The climate and conditions that are best for apples are best for man.—• Exchange. Marriage is a lottery in which many a girl doesn’t even get a chance to take a single chance. When duty calls deafness becomes epidemic. Thu wrong way fats /Suckles ' Arbu Alps' is H™ always fresh- 1 'lpi always good 'J©'' l Thm right way new co/Tyffl Thu wrong way tUofhtrcofftod found any Half so I goodol drtucf.'ot’l Thm right wmy