The News-herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1898-1965, April 03, 1924, Page Page Four, Image 4

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Page Four «•* fcnd Second H'laJ Ford*. H. Co. C«.b or crediv. STOP CATARRH! OPEN NOSTRILS AND HEAD Says Cream Applied in Nostrils Relieves Head-Colds at Once. If your nostrils are clogged and your head is stulTed and you can't breathe freelv because of a cold or catarrh, just pet a small bottle of Ely'* Cream Palm at any drug store. Apply a little, of tins fragrant, antiseptic cream into your nos trils and let it penetrate through every air passage of vour head, sooiliing and healing the ioilamed. swollen mucous membrane and you get instant relief. Ah! How good it feels. Vour nos trils are open, your head is clear, no mere hawking, snuffling, blowing; no move lieadaelie, dryness or struggling for br atti. Ely’s Cream Halm is just v, bat sufferers from bead colds and catfnr'i need. It’s a delight. SULPHUR CLEARS ROUGH, RED SKIN Face, Neck and Arms Easily Made Smooth, Say* Specialist Any breaking out of the skin, even fiery, itching eczema, Can he quickly overcome by applying a little Mentho- Sulphur, declares a noted skin special ist Because of its germ destroying properties, this sulphur preparation be gins at once to soothe irritated skin and heal eruptions such as rash, pimples and ring worm. It seldom fails to remove the torment and disfigurement, and you do not have to wait for relief from embarrassment Improvement quickly shows Sufferer* from skin trouble should obtain a small jar of Rowles Mcntho-Sulphur from any good druggist and use it like cold cream. RED PEPPERS END RHEUMATIC PIS When you are suffering with rheu matism so you can hardly get around just try Red Pepper Rtfl «nd you will have the quickest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, pene trating heat as red peppers. Instant re lief. Just as soon as you apply Red Pepper Rub you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Frees the blood circulation, breaks up the conges tion—and the old rheumatism torture is gone. Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers, costs little at any drug store. Get a jar at once. Use it for lumbago, neuritis, backache, stiff neck, sore muscles, colds in chest. Almost instant relief awaits you. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowlea on each package. SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK It ’a Grandmother’* Recipe to Bring Back Color and Luatre to Hair That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brew ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul phur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray or streaked, just an application or two of Sage and Sul phur enhances its appearance a hun dredfold. Don't bother to prepare the mixture : you can get this famous old recipe im proved by the addition of other ingre dients at a small cost, all ready for use. It is called Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound. This can always be de pended upon to bring back the natural color and lustre of your hair. Everybody uses “Wyeth’s” Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair has disappeared, and after another applica tion it becomes beautifully dark and appears glossy and lustrous. If Kidneys Act Bad Take Salts Say» Backache Often Means You Have Not Been Drinking Enough Water When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it may mean you have been eating foods which create acids, says a well-known author ity. An excess of such acids overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kid neys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels, removing all the body’s urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physi cian at once or get from your pharma cist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablcspoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimulate sluggish kid neys, also to neutralize acids in the system, so they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, can not in jure and makes a delightful, efferves cent lithia-water drink. Drink lots of soft water. By all means have your physician examine your kidneys at least twice a year. ’j^M YEP-THE TIME TO P O A 'i'WINO IS WHEN IT SHOULD j as mh, / poem, Uncle Jahn Old Thomas Trett would stew and fret, and toil and crave and borrow. ... He wouldn’t stop if he should drop—but said he’d rest tomorrow! Folks said he never went to bed —»o hard he pined fer riches. He wasted time—an’ called it crime—by puttin’ on his breeches! He fed the stock an’ watched the clock —he put up hay on Sunday. . . . "The world is mine.” he would opine—and every day was Monday. . . . The neigh bors guessed he’d have to rest if sickness overtook him—but. neither health nor sordid wealth neglected or forsook him! Some called it pluck, and. others, luck—but all pronounced it slavin’ because his life was endless strife of garnerin’ »nd savin’. . . . One eventide he up and died—which left ns iteeped in sorrow. . .• . Above his head, a tablet read, that he would rest tomorrow! We hope it’s so, though we dunno—he’s too fur gone to foller—though tome surmise he’d farm the ikies —if he could make a dol ‘ M 1 Increase Agricultural Yields. Greater agricultural production must be forthcoming this year, ac cording to business men and agricul turists, in a return to normalcy. Attention is called to the fact that there are thousands of acres of farm land lying idle in Georgia and neigh boring states, which should be brought to a state of cultivation. Recogniz ing this situation railroads and real estate men are cooperating in an ef fort to attract home seekers. In addition to the movement te bring home seekers to the southeast movements are under way to en courage and cooperate with the far mers at home in an effort to bring about greater production for the year. The statement is made by editors who are urging greater production that the only hope for substantial gain in business lines is to increase the yield from agricultural industry on which al! line 3of commerce are dependent. W. L. NIX, Attorney at Law, Office in New Tanner Building LAWRENCEViLLE, GA. fob. Order It Today! The spring r-”T for Ford Tourm" has , started Arrange to place >OU JL C. C SO that you will not be obliged to wait for delivery. not wish to pay cash for your car, you can arrange for a small payment down and easy terms on the balance. Or you can buy on the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan. See the Nearest Authorized FVd Dealer CARS-TRUCKS-TRACTORS Albert Pike, Who Died on April 2, 1891, Received More Honors From World Craft Than Any Other Man. Washington, D. C., March 27. —The outstanding Masonic anniversary in the month of April is the death of Albert Pike, which will be commemo rated on April 2nd by Masonic lodges throughout the world. Albert Pike was the greatest Ma sonic scholar of history, and his writ ings constitute the most comprehen sive and authoritative interpretation of Masonic symbolism and tradition. His Morals and Dogma is a monu mental work, being a compendium of the religious philosophies of the ages. From 1859 to 1891, the year of his loath, he was the sovereign grand commander of the Scottish rite of the southern jurisdiction, during which time he entirely revised the rituals of the Scottish rite degrees. During his life his marvelous erudition and splendid character were recognied universally' by the Masonic bodies and he received more honors from the Masonic jurisdictions of the EWorld than any other Mason in history. He was probably the most volumin ous Masonic writer that ever lived. In the library of the House of the Temple in Washington there are scores of, volumes of manuscripts be sides hundreds of pamphlets, all written With a qujlj pen. So per fectly did his mind function and so precise was his writing that there has not been found one blot, erasure, correction, or inter-lineation. He was a marvelous linguist and at sixty-jive took up the study of Sanskrit and after seventy years of age he translated hundreds of Vcdic hymns. /*' T ll ' 11 ' S. S=J Benjamin Franklin. The death of Benjamin Franklin, one-time grand master of Masons of Pennsylvania, will be commemorated on the 17th day of April. His death occurred in 1790. Benjamin Frank lin became a member of St Johns Ma sonic lodge, Philadelphia, in the year 1730. In 1734 he was elected grand master of Masons of Pennsylvania; from 1735 to 1738 served as secre tary of St Johns lffdge; in 1749 was provincial grand master; in 1776 af filiated with Masonic lodges in France; in 1777 was elected a mem ber of Loge des IX Soeurs (Nine Sis ters or Muses) of Paris. He assist ed at the initiation of Voltaire in the lodge of the Nine Sisters in 1778; in 1782 was elected venerable master of Loge des IX Soeurs; in 1782 became a member of Lodge De Saint Jean de Jerusalem, of which lodge he later was elected venerable dTionneur. He was on the committee which drafted the declaration of independ ence and was one of the signers. Mark Twain died on April 21, 1910. He was a member of Polar Star Ma sonic lodge No. 79, St. Louis. Masons of many states will remem ber the birth of General Lew Wallace, who was born on April 10, 1827. His exploits on the battlefields of the civil war, his famous novel Ben Hur, and his record as governor of New Mexico, won for him splendid laurels in the fields of military achievement, litera ture and statesmanship. He was an active member of Motngomery Ma sonic lodge No. 50, Crawfordsville, Indiana. Depew and Markham. Two living Masons whose birthdays will be happily remembered are Chuncey M. Depew, whose ninetieth birthday will be celebrated on April \ v ~u.rU' ;tf rr~ \ THE NEWS-HERAJLD, Uwr««WM*. Cmt|l* 23. As railway executive, party leader, and wit he will be long re membered, but his claim to undying fame will undoubtedly rest upon his reputation as an after dinner speaker and reconteur. His inimitable op timism and cheeriness have been called a national asset. Senator De pew was raised in Courtland Masonic Lodge No. 34, Peekskill, N. Y. , on July 25, 1861. On the same day Edwin Markham, the famous poet, will celebrate his seventy-second birthday. His poems “The Man With the Hoe,” "Lincoln,” and others, rank him among the greatest poets of the present time and his sunny personality has endeared him to hosts of friends throughout the nation. He was raised in Acacia lodge No 92, Coloma, California, in the early 80’s. Another Mason who has won fame in a different field of endeavor and whose birthday will be remembered by Masonic lodges is Reginald de Koven, who was bom April 3, 1861. His operas, like “Robin Hood,” al though not among the greatest com positions of music, nevertheless set all America singing and made him deservedly popular. Masonry’s connection with the early events of the nation’s history is again emphasized in the person of Roger Sherman, one of the signers of the declaration of independence, who was born April 19, 1721. He was made a Mason just prior to the breaking out of the revolution and his attend ance at Masonic lodges is frequently noted. John Paul Jones, whose title “Father of the American Navy” t has never been successfully challenged and whose achievements upon the high seas for the cause of liberty make popular hero stories for our American youth, occupies a place in April history in that his grave, long lost, was discovered in Paris on April 14, 1905, and on April 24, 1906, his remains were interred at Annapolis with appropriate ceremonies. Commo dore Jones was a member of St. Ber nard’s lodge No. 122, Kirkcudbright, Scotland, in which lodge he was raised November 27, 1770. British Masonry celebrates two an niversries of famous Masons in April. The Duke of Wellington, who smashed the armies of Napoleon at Waterloo and threw the French em peror’s star into eclipse, was raised a Mason on December 17, 1790, in Ma sonic lodge No. 494, in Trim, in the county of Meath. The Iron Duke was bom April 29, 1789. Edward Gibbon, whose epoch-mak ing work “The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,” representing six teen years of intensive study and re search and which remains the stand ard history of Rome, was bom April 27, 1737, and was a member of Lodge of Friendship No 6, in which lodge he was raised in March, 1775. On April 18, 1775, occurred the famous ride of Paul Revere. This will be the occasion of patriotic meeting in Masonic lodges. Paul Re vere was an enthusiastic Mason and became grand master of Masons of Massachusetts in 1794. Edmund Burke’s Sensational speech before parliament denouncing the un just taxes imposed upon the colonies took place on April 19, 1774. His speech of conciliation proved him the friend of America and won for him the undying love of the American people. He was a member of Jerusa lem lodge No. 44, Clerkenwell, Lon don. YOU NEED NOT FAIL. Are you in a rut? Folks hold ing you back from a raise in pay? No bright outlook ahead ? Are pou discouraged? That’s the way it was with Willie A. Heath, of Champaign, 111, for more than 19 years. The elder Heath died, leaving a wife and two dependent daughters when Willie was knee-high to a ‘ grass-hopper. If he wanted to go ;o school, they said, he must work ill day and study at night. He lid both, and he worked his way :hrough college too. And so he iegan, as so many others have, :o sell papers on the streets, can vass magazines, run errands for ocal stores, and hold minor clerk :hips. One day they organized a bank in Chamnaign, and Willie rot a job as messenger. Ho told 1 > mother and his friends that he Pee Qee FLOOR ENAMEL I • 'j -L-I—J—l \—i tile. Other Pec Qcc Products Pee Gee Re-Nu-Lac Pee Gee Flatkoatt Pee Gee Velkoatt Pee Gee China Enamel Pee Gee Varnches Pee Gee Wondertone Dystain Pee Gee Floor Wax Peaslee-Gaulbert Co. Incorporated / Atlanta - Louisville - Dallas VAENISHESSmiNS-ENAMELS THE NEWS-HERALD Ten Months $ 1.00 END IN your order today for this live county semi weekly at SI.OO for ten month’s subscription. This is “political year” and you will need the papers as never before; read the news about people you know —keep up with the CANDIDATES. MAIL THE COUPON NOW. This offer of ten month’s subscription for SI.OO ap plies to new and old readers alike. Subscribers whose pa pers are now expiring may also take advantage of this offer; you, too, will receive the NEWS-HERALD ten months for SI.OO if you act now. Two coupons are printed below for your conven ience. Cut out the one which applies to your case and bring or mail to this office with SI.OO and receipt will be issued at above price. (FOR NEW SUBSCRIBERS) The New«-Herald, Lawrenceville, Ga. Send your paper for ten months to Name Route —. For which SI.OO is enclosed. was going to stick until the day came that he was the bank’s head. Nineteen years later, when he was 40 years old, he was cashier in the bank at a salary of S3O a week. As a side line he served as school trea surer at a weekly stipend of $4.81 a week. But on that income he lived and SAVED. The entire countryside grew to know him as an honest, dependable man, never absent. And thus it came about that the State auditor at Spring field. 111., heard of him, and be cause of his local reputation sent for him and made him State Bank Examiner at $2,500 a year. But Willie lived at the $35 a week rate and invested the balance in Government ' nnds and guaranteed first mortgages. His new duties took him all over the State. In Chicago be found a bank on its Dries l-Ltrd Ovesru it A floor painted with Pee Gee FcOGR ENAMEL will not crach or peel. Water wiil not mar the surf ace and i -narks will not show. Floors that are dull anc that are scratched o duty to the room. Pee Qee FL nine beaut any color sd Paint Pee Qte - , ■ W. T. TANNE r LAWRENCEVILLE, GA. THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1924. -By H 1 WHIT jHADLEYfI 4r last legs because of family man agement. He was about to close it when they offered him the job of vice-president at $6,000 a year. Bankers watched him save the tattering bank and made him president of the Livestock National Bank at $12,000 a year, and then the Government heard, of him and made him head of the Federal Re serve Bank at nearly $50,000 a year. “I won out,” he says, “because I stuck and refused to get discour aged. I was*reaay for opportunity when it came because I knew my work backwards.” (FOR OLD SUBSCRIBERS) The New«-Herald, Lawrenceville, Ga. Enclosed is SI.OO in renewal of my subscrip tion for ten months. Name Address Route m