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POISON
in Your bowels!
Poisons absorbed into the system
from souring waste in the bowels,
cause that dull, headachy, sluggish,
bilious condition; coat the tongue;
foul the breath; sap energy, strength
and nerve-force. A little of Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will clear
up trouble like that, gently, harm
lessly, in a hurry. The difference it
will make in your feelings over night
will prove its merit to you.
Dr. Caldwell studied constipation
for over forty-seven years. This long
experience enabled him to make his
prescription just what men, women,
old people and children need to make
their bowels help themselves. Its
natural, mild, thorough action and
its pleasant taste commend it to
everyone. That’s why “Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin,” as it is called, is the
most popular laxative drugstores sell*
Dr. W. B. Caldwell’s
SYRUP PEPSIN
A Doctor's Family Laxative
Shocking Savagery
Explorer—T have made a remark
able discovery. A tribe of human
beings that possess no weapons of
warfare.
Listener —Is that so? I didn’t
think there was any part of the
world that uncivilized. — Chicago
Daily News.
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets are best for liver,
bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for
a laxative —three for a cathartic. —Adv.
♦
Ban on Horns and Whistles
Tlie international congress of pub
lic hygiene, meeting in Paris, voted
in favor of the prohibition of horns
and whistles as gifts to children.
Tlie congress decided the noises ol
the horns and whistles were injuri
ous to the health, and microbes were
passed about from mouth to mouth.
USED TO SUFFER
EACH MONTH
"I used to have severe head
aches each month,” writes Mrs.
Henry Heape, of 248 Lincoln. St.,
Savannah, Ga. “I suffered a great
deal. The pain in my head seemed
to run down the back of my neck.
I felt like I was drawing back. I
would get very nauseated and have
chills. I would have to go to bed. My
mother and my mother-in-law both
had taken Cardul, and I knew it was
good. I bought a bottle, and after 1
began taking it I felt strong
er. I kept on taking Car
dui, for I found
by doing so I
could avoid t\ « \ uB
thehead-^^^^B < % > \ a %
aches > \
I have ut
taken a- ^k^^k W % Vjbuti nc
bout eight
bottles of WOMEN
Cardul.” TO HEALTH
r -
WORMS—A CHILD’S
GREATEST ENEMY
Look for these symptoms in
your child—gritting the teeth,
picking the nostrils, disor
dered stomach. These signs
may mean worms. And worms
left in the body mean broken
health.
Don t delay one hour. Frey’s Ver
mifuge rids a child of worms quickly.
For 75 years it has been America s
safe, vegetable worm medicine. At
all druggists!
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms
f ’
RM SOYEARS-<.
W ChillTonic*
For over 50 [M a l ar i a
years it has been
the household Chills
remedy for all
forms of ' and
It is a Reliable, Fever
Sx 1 tel Dengue
DOUBLE STRENGTH
FOR COLDS
The double strength feature of
St. Joseph’s Lax-ana is proving a
blessing to thousands of men, wo
men and children because of ths
quick, sure way it breaks up colds.
You, too will find it a blessing be
cause now you don’t have to suffer
several days and maybe weeks be
fore your cold is finally stopped.
You can take St. Joseph’s Lax-ana
(double strength) at the first sneeze
and check your cold while you sleep.
Combines best cold medicines known
to science together with quick act
ing laxatives. Sold by all druggists
on a monqy-back guarantee.
| AX"AN A
BBCSIESi&SEEZZQESSEZSHI
PLAN FIRST STUDY
OF HEART DISEASE
Public Health Service Is to
Make Survey.
Washington. — The public health
service is planning to undertake its
first study of heart disease In the Unit
ed States. Working with a special
fund of SIO,OOO, its experts will explore
the field as thoroughly as they can. to
learn why the malady is the greatest
single cause of death among adults.
The survey, which will be started at
the beginning of the fiscal year, July
I, will probably require five years to
Complete.
Heart disease claims each year an
Increasing number of victims. In the
United States registration area the af
fliction caused 132.1 deaths per 100,000
.>f population in 1900. By 1910 the
rate had jumped to 158.8; in 1920 it
was 159.3 ,and in 1929 it had gone up
to 210.9. In 1927, heart disease ac
counted for 211,976 deaths; in 1928 the
Sgure was 237,849, and in 1929 it rose
to 245,244.
That is why the public health serv
ice, in deciding to conduct a survey
of the diseases which are the princi
pal causes of death among adults, has
naturally selected heart disease for its
initial Investigation. Maladies of the
heart are not sectional, nor apparently
ire they confined to any particular
jroup In the population. If it is found
that there are any means or reducing
the toll, the gain will be shared almost
equally by all parts of the country.
Health Improvement.
In undertaking a campaign against
the principal hazards to health many
years, ago, the organization, now head
ed by Surgeon General Hugh S. Cum
ming, devoted its efforts at first main
ly to improving the standards of sani
tation. Emphasis was placed on pure
ivater, pure milk and the elimination
as the conditions which caused typhoid
fever, yellow fever and other diseases
to be almost endemic in many of our
larger cities. The country was quick
to respond to the leadership of the
public health service and other agen
cies in the same field, with the result
that today the standards of sanitation
are infinitely higher than they were
30 years ago. Next, the public health
service directed its weapons against
diseases of childhood and made a drive
to reduce the very high maternity
death rate. It has now been engaged
for some years In work along these
lines, and the expectancy of life has
steadily increased for children. Adults,
however, have not gained correspond
ingly.
To Cover Four Subjects.
Realizing that it is now the turn of
the adult population, the public health
service proposes to take up immediate
,y heart disease, whose victims number
so many thousands of men and wom
en cut down in the prime of life. The
field of Investigation, as now charted,
will cover four subjects, the first of
which concerns the effect of certain
infectious diseases on the heart. A re
lationship is known to exist between
rheumatism and scarlet fever on the
ane side and the heart on the other,
out medical science has still many
lark corners to explore.
Light will be sought regarding the
effect of toxic agencies, such as lead
and alcohol poisoning, on the heart.
Medical men agree that such poisons
do have an effect of this sort, but there
is need to determine precisely whether
they permanently injure the heart and
whether remedies can be found.
As a third channel of exploration,
the public health service will try to
ascertain the relationship between
overexertion and deterioration of the
heart. If competitive sport tends to
Injure the heart, is this more true of
certain sports than of others? Which
Involves the greater strain, football or
rowing? These and related questions
press for an answer.
Finally, the public health investiga
tors hope to find out whether heart
disease can be inherited.
Great Britain Has 51,000
Miles of Railroad Track
London. —There are 51,000 miles of
single railroad track in Great Britain,
which cost over $30,000,000 per an
num to maintain, apart from renewals.
Between 1,200 and 1,300 miles of
track are renewed annually.
Nearly 210,000 tons of rails, 4,500-
000 ties and 2,000,000 tons of ballast
are required in this work. Most of
the relaying work is done at night and
over the week-end, to avoid interfer
ence.
Track laying machines which lift
out complete sections of about 45 to
60 feet of track and place new sec
tions in their place are used.
Last year a total of 1,705,000,000
passenger journeys were made over
the 51,000 miles of track.
**************************
* . *
* German Population *
* Is Showing Decrease *
* Berlin. —Doctor Bergdoerfer of *.
* the reich statistical office reports *
* that deaths in Germany in the *
* past year exceeded births by 2.1 *
per 1,000 inhabitants. At this J
* rate the German population will *
* decline from 67,500,000 to 63,- J
* 000,000 between the years 1945 *
J and 1975.
* At the same time a census tak- *
* en last October gives the total- *
J population of Japan proper as i
* 64,447,000, an increase of 4,017,- *
* 000 (luring the past five years. X
' THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
COLLEGE ROMANCES
ARE MOST LASTING
Campus Best Spot to Make
Happy Marriage.
New York. —The college campus is,
and is by long odds, the best spot
In American life for the making of a
happy and lasting marriage. While
the general divorce rate has Increased
until now there Is one divorce to every
six marriages, the record of marriages
resulting from college romances show
only one divorce among every 75
couples.
These figures, compiled by Rita S.
Halle in a survey of 100 co-educationa!
colleges, are published in the Good
Housekeeping Magazine,
Miss Halle finds several reasons
why marriages that follow college
courtships have eight times the
chances of happiness that others have.
One is that college graduates marry
at a later age than the average.
“Since a great many divorces are
granted to those who have married
before their twenties, or in their early
twenties, it is possible that the elimi
nation of this group accounts for
some of the difference,” she says.
A second, and more Important, rea
son is that college boys and girls
have equal advantages and have come
to regard each other as intellectual
equals. The result is that a?ter the
first romantic period of marriage has
passed they have intellectual com
panionships to fall back upon and are
not so likely to bore each other as
they might if they were on different
intellectual planes.
Most important, probably, is the
fact that the college boy and girl
have the opportunity to judge each
other under many conditions and over
a long period.
“The usual co-educational courtship
Is carried on over a period of years.”
the Good Housekeeping writer points
out, “and at a time when boys and
girls are keen in observation and tre
mendously critical, which is impor
tant when choosing a life partner.
During that time they have oppor
tunity to see each other under all
conditions, in the class room and on
the athletic field, In the fraternity
house and the social hall, under con
ditions of stress as well as under
happier conditions. A girl is given
the opportunity to know that the so
cially attractive boy may be only that,
while others that do not shine so
cially have the real qualities that
make for stability in marriage and in
life. The young man, too, has had
time to see beneath the surface pretti
ness that has caught his eye.”
4
Americans Add to Their
Investments in Canada
Montreal, P. Q. —Investments of
American capital in Canada have in
creased at the rate of $1,600,000 a year
in the last eleven years, according to a
bulletin issued here by the department
of immigration and colonization of the
Canadian Pacific railway.
“More than $1,669,000,000 in capital
from the United States has been in
vested in commercial enterprises in the
Dominion in the last eleven years,”
says the bulletin. “Total American
investments in the Dominion amount
to’ more than $3,889,075,130, or 61 per
cent of all the capital from other
countries invested in Canada.
“Compared to the pre-war totals of
1913, the investment of American cap
ital in Canada has practically trebled,
whereas that of Great Britain has de
clined about 50 per cent.”
Pennsylvania Y. M. C. A.
Keeping Jobless Busy
Harrisburg, Pa. —Unemployed men
need not necessarily be idle, accord
ing to a plan sponsored by the Central
Y. M. C. A. here.
A free program of recreation and
practical Instruction has been ar
ranged to provide jobless men with
something to do of beneficial nature.
Originally two mornings a week
were devoted to the enterprise.
So great has been the response that
officials have now turned over the
buildings and its facilities and the
services of its instructors for four
mornings each week.
The plan is based on the theory
that idle hands lead the possessor
into trouble and contribute to his
physical, mental and spiritual degen
eration.
New Captain and Crew
Now Man Old Ironsides
Boston. —Old Ironsides has a new
captain.
Commander Louis J. Gulliver, U. S.
N„ executive officer of the U. S. S.
Rochester, has been assigned to take
command of the famed frigate which
for more than a century and a quarter
has been known officially as the U. S.
S. Constitution.
Commander Gulliver and a crew of
42 men will be aboard Old Ironsides
when she leaves here July 1 for a tour
of American ports. For some time Old
Ironsides has been undergoing recon
struction at Boston navy yard, the
work having been financed by con
tributions from America’s school chil
dren.
Appetites of Coeds at
Michigan State Increase
East Lansing, Mich. —Coeds at Mich
igan State college are eating nearly
a third more this year than last year,
according to Miss Katherine Kinsler.
food director of the women’s commons.
Computed on a per capita basis, it Is
shown that the 185 girls are consuming
as much as a total of 235 did In 1930.
BACKWOODS BRIDE
TO HELP OWN KIND
Mrs. “Bud” Stillman Plans
Work Among Poor.
Montpeal.—Another interesting chap
ter in the international romance of
James A. (Bud) Stillman, Jr., and his
Canadian wife, formerly Lena Wilson
of Grand Anse, Quebec, has been writ
ten with a definite announcement by
the latter that she plans to become
her husband’s classmate at Harvard
university and to study medicine with
him.
Mrs. Stillman, who until her mar
riage three years ago was a typical
and picturesque child of the Quebec
backwoods, Is animated partly with a
desire to occupy her leisure time, but
more by a desire to aid and encourage
her husband In his profession and to
bring medical assistance to the friends
of her childhood days.
Sees Bright Future.
After they graduate and are qual
ified to practice medicine, they will
probably settle in Quebec, near Lena’s
former home in Grand Anse for, as
she declares, “by the time we are
ready, there will be a remarkable
opening and opportunity for a young
couple, properly equipped, to serve
mankind in that region.
“My husband intends to specialize
In children’s diseases and I can see a
wonderful opportunity to be of help,
if I have the proper training and ex
perience.”
Her youthful husband declares that
he is bent on making a success in his
medical studies, and, later, in special
izing on children’s disease.
“Os course,” he admits, “many peo
ple think I don’t have to worry be
cause of the money that Is reported to
be at my disposal. But the financial
aspect does not make a particle of
difference to me. I am going at my
studies and my career just as though
I hadn’t a cent and had to earn a liv
ing for Lena and myself.”
Now in Third Year.
Bud is now in his third year at the
medical school, but this is the first in
which he will get any actual hospital
work. Included In his experience will
be a tour of duty at the children’s
hospital where he hopes to start his
concentration on the subject of chil
dren’s diseases.
The Stillman-Wilson wedding at
Grand Anse three years ago was one
of the most picturesque international
romances of the present century, and
its new value was not minimized
when Mrs. Anne Stillman, mother of
the bridegroom, climaxed the cere
mony by bombarding photographers
.with dinner plates, in true movie-com
edy style,
Mrs. Stillman. Sr., also figured in
the limelight when she remarried
Bud’s father, from whom she had
been divorced, after a sensational
court hearing a few years before.
Expert Claims Reds May
Shake Markets of World
Stockholm. —A prominent Swedish
business man who is an excellent au
thority on Russian affairs has just
returned from an extended visit to
Russia.
In an interview here he said that the
Industrial development of Russia is
becoming a very serious menace to
western European export and the ex
port industry of America.
He states that notwithstanding the
Intensive propaganda against Russia
and the numerous articles appearing
In the press concerning the crisis in
that country, the fact remains that
the Soviets have created an industrial
machine which will become a formid
able power in the future. During
the next few years the Russian ex
port offensive will shake many of the
world’s markets, particularly timber,
wheat, and oil, extending later to
other fields of industry, thus influenc
ing world labor.
The ambition of Stalin, he states, is
to crush western capitalism by or
ganizing Russia’s 100,060,000 cheap
workers into effective armies of low
paid labor.
Malaria Paresis Cure
Found to Be Efficient
Vienna. —Doctor Dattner of the Vien
na psychiatric clinic, states that the
result of Prof. Wagner von Jauregg’s
treatment .of paralysis by infecting pa
tients with malaria and thereby pro
ducing high fever surpasses all expec
tations.
Os 129 patients thus treated in 1922
to 1924 no fewer than 67 are still
alive. Os these 53 are perfectly well
and showing no trace of paralysis, al
though formerly regarded as Incurable.
It will be remembered that Prof.
Wagner von Jauregg received the No
bel prize.
g Stag Tricks Hunters; §
Flees Into Barroom 3
§ Taunton, England. — Chased 3
g five hours by a number of hunt- 5
S ers, a stag demonstrated that he 3
g had the pattern of his chasers. 2
g After a 20-mile race he jumped g
g over a wall, entered a public g
g house and made for the back 5
g room. When face to face with g
g foaming mugs on the mahogany g
g bar, the thirsty hunters forgot g
g their intended victim. Ten min- g
g utes later they made for the back g
g room and found that the stag g
g had gone through the window, g
g curtain, glass, sash and all. g
^kitchenl
i CABINET j
To me It seems as if when God
conceived the world, that was
poetry: He formed It, and that was
sculpture: He varied and colored
it, and that was painting: And
then, crowning all. He peopled It
with living beings, and that was
the grand divine, eternal drama.
—Charlotte Cushman.
THE TASTY TORTE
Tor the cake par excellence, the
torte is one of the daintiest. Our Ger-
man cooks excel in this
kind of a cake combina
tion. They are rich with
nuts, chopped or rolled
fine, plenty of eggs and
crumbs, with spices. The
baking is another im
portant point, as slow,
careful baking is neces
sary for a light and ten
der torte.
Schaum Torte.—Beat three egg
whites until stiff but not dry, add one
cupful of sugar very lightly and grad
ually, not to lose the lightness, a pinch
of salt, one-half tablespoonful of vine
gar and one-half teaspoonful of vanilla.
Bake in two deep layer tins for one
hour. Put together with whipped
cream, or add nuts and chopped pine
apple with the cream.
Walnut Torte.—Beat the yolks of
six eggs with one cupful of sugar, add
one-fourth pound of walnuts and six
lady fingers grated, two tablespoon
fuls of flour and one teaspoonful of
baking powder. Add the juice and
rind of a lemon and when all the in
gredients are well mixed, add the
stiffly beaten egg whites to which a
pinch of salt has been added. Bake in
layers in a moderate oven and use the
following:
Filling.—To one beaten egg yolk
add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, and
three-fourths of a cupful of milk.
Cook, stirring constantly until the mix
ture coats the spoon, add one and one
half cupfuls of grated walnut meats
with a flavoring of almond and vanilla.
Use between the layers and ice the
top of the torte.
Date Torte.—Rub sixteen dates to
a smooth paste with two tablespoon
fuls of lemon juice. Beat two whole
eggs, add seven yolks, add one and
three-fourths cupfuls of sugar, beat
well, add the dates, three tablespoon
fuls of grated chocolate and one tea
spoonful each of cinnamon, allspice,
and a cupful of cracker crumbs. Stir
well and fold in the stiffly beaten
whites of seven eggs. Bake in a large
spring form forty minutes.
(©, 1931, Western Newspaper Union.)
Early Hospitals
The establishment of hospitals In
the sense in which we understand
them now probably occurred in Eu
rope during the Middle ages. Histo
rians differ somewhat on this, but it
is generally agreed that the institu
tions conducted in Europe by various
religious orders were perhaps the
forerunners of the present-day hos
pitals. It should be remembered, how
ever, that there were certain places
set aside for the treatment of the sick
in early Greece. These were more on
the order of clinics rather than hos
pitals in the modern sense of the
word. The first hospital in the United
States was established a few years
after the settlement of New York
was made, about 1670. ,
Ancient Festival
Originally a kermess was a church
festival, but later was an outdoor fes
tival or fair held annually in the
Low Countries of Europe and French
Flanders. Either an indoor or out
door fair on the order of the Flemish
festival is sometimes given the name.
Key to Prosperity
Every good and enduring possession
of mankind is the product of toil and
thought. There are times when work
seems unnecessary and thought a
weariness of the mind, but these are
not the times of progress.—Collier’s
Weekly.
New Observatory Near Pole
The “farthest north” observatory is
at Thomso, Norway, to be used for
the study and photography of the
northern lights. It is equipped with
a spectrograph which splits the colors
of the northern lights so that they
may be subjected to scientific study.
Mona Lisa Wins
La Giocon^a sat three years for Da
Vinci’s famous painting, Mona Lisa.
Thus, in addition to being a beautiful
woman, she was one of the earliest of
the endurance sitters.—Detroit News.
Contact I
A scientist has discovered a new
species of mosquito. We understand,
however, that it discovered him first
—Bystander, London.
Interesting Collection
A collection of old plantation dia
ries, journals and records and Con
federate banknotes, dating from 1840
to 1900 is in the Louisiana State uni
versity library, the gift of the De-
Clouet family of La Fayette, La.
Always Something Worse
If your neighbor’s radio annoys you,
think of the hundreds of other pro
grams on the air to which you don’t
have to listen, and be grateful.—Louis
,'Ue Courier Journal.
CAN’T
QUIT
Fatigue is the signal to rest. Obey it
if you can. When you can’t, keep cool
and carry-on in comfort.
Bayer Aspirin was meant for just
such times, because it insures your
comfort. Freedom from pains that
nag at nerves and wear you down.
One tablet will block a threatening
headache while it’s still just a threat.
Take two or three tablets when
you have caught a cold, and that’s
usually the end of it.
Carry Bayer Aspirin when you
travel. Have some at home. It will
often “save the day.”
From a grumbling tooth to those
rheumatic pains, Bayer Aspirin is
ready with its quick relief—and it
always works. Neuralgia. Neuritis.
Any nagging, needless pain.
Get the genuine tablets, stamped
with the Bayer cross. Why experi
ment with imitations costing a few
cents less? The saving is too little.
There is too much at stake. But
there is economy in the purchase of
genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets in the
large bottles,
“Mikes” to Locate Wolves
U. S. S. R. scientists have an
nounced a novel plan for cutting
down the great packs of wolves in
Siberia, making winter travel safer.
At intervals throughout the wolf
country will be hung microphones
connected to a central telephone ex
change. The “central” will listen
for savage howls, locate the sending
station and despatch rangers to de
stroy the howlers. —Time Magazine.
AUGUST fLOWER
—brings almost instant relief from
terrible colic pains. Banishes heart
burn, nausea, sick headache, bilious
ness, sluggish liver, constipation.
Promptly restores good appetite and
_ digestion, and regular,
thorough elimination.
CndS GUARANTEED.
DYSPEPSIA/
Quickly!
Costly Meal for Pig
Somewhere on a California hog
ranch there is a pig worth about
$2,575 as a result of Mrs. F. W.
Beardslee’s carelessness. For Mrs.
Beardslee forgot that she had hid
den $2,575 worth of pearls, opals and
diamonds in a wastebasket. The
basket was dumped in a garbage
barrel and garbage from San Fran
cisco is sold to nearby ranches spe
cializing in raising porkers.
Insects
carry
disease!
Kill them
quick!
FLIT
Largest Seller in 121 Countries
Pin Episode
“Why didn’t you hire that man?
He picked up a pin.”
“I don’t know just what moral to
draw.”
“Hey?"
“He picked it up in our store and
didn’t turn it in.”
It is necessary to get a man inter
ested in his soul before he can be
made anxious to “save” it.
ADVICE TO
YOUNG GIRLS
Jacksonville, Fla.
—“When girls
are backward in
developing I ad
vise giving them
Dr. Pierce’s Fa
vorite Prescrip
tion. One of my
daughters became
ail rundown in
health, was so
nervous, weak
and pale that she had to quit school.
Upon the advice of a nurse I gave her
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription; it
soon made her strong and well and
she developed along natural lines—since
then her health has been very good.”
—Mrs. Mary E. Conner, 1407 E. 11th
St All druggists. Fluid or tablets.
Send 10c to Df. Pierce’a Clinie, Buffalo,
N, for a trial package.