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great things .
He who will do great things
pull himself together—Goethe.
WHEN YOU
A LAXATIVE
... use a
It isn’t what brand of laxative
take that’s liquid so laxative important—it’s be
form. A can If only
in any needed, required amount. need
little is you never
a bit too much.
Doctors favor the easily of
liquid laxatives. Instead any
that does not encourage
from the fixed dose. A iixed dose
be an overdose for you—or
child. remember this
Always constipation: the secret one of
about reduced dosage.
real relief is
Give the bowels only as much
as may be needed, and less help
the need grows less. You will find
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin the bowels. an It
aid in regulating and
tains senna will cascara clcar-up
laxatives) and it
bilious, sluggish condition
upset. Delightful taste, and
action. Your druggist has it.
@4 .(?a£c£ure£fi
SYRUP
Courage
He is the truly courageous
who never desponds.—Confucius.
COMMON
VOIDS
I Relieve the distressing \
symptoms by applying
Mentholatum in nostrils
and rubbing on chest.
Gives COMFORT Daily
Pimples on
Never Could
Shave
Healed by Cuticura
“Three years ago my face
arms broke out with a skin
that was followed by large, red
ples. They festered and went
over my face and arms. They
and burned and I could never
I lost much rest at night with
“Nothing I tried helped very
Then I saw an advertisement
Cuticura Soap and Ointment
purchased them. I used about
cakes of Cuticura Soap and one
a half boxes of Cuticura
and now I feel like a new man.
am completely healed.”
Harry R. Hall, 3958 14th Ave.,
mingham, Ala., Jan. 2G, 1934.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and
Talcum 25c. Sold Everywhere.
sample each free. Address:
cura Laboratories, Dept. R,
Mass.”—Adv.
A TONIC and
Mr. J. W. Buck of
Ellis St.. Augusta. Ga.,
“Dr. Pierce's Golden
I Discovery is a
, tonic. I have relied upon
g ~ - ». — at different times when
tai J| “3 -lacked petite strength and digestion and my
ST&' poor. 'Discovery' Always after taking
m I would be
“ good health again.”
New size, . tablets 50 cts., liquid *1.00.
.
tabs °r liquid, *1.35. All druggists.
Write Dr. Pierce's Clinic. Buffalo, N. Y-
free medical advice.
Do you lack
Art you all In, tirad and run
tflinWSMITH's " Tonic
WHI rid you of
MALARIA
«nd build you up. Used for 65 years for
Fever, Malaria and
A General Tonic
80c and $1.00 At All Druggists
layer cake 53 be effective Bak-
For delicious chocolate fi sure to use our pure,
Smm ing Soda W&-W&f • • - is specified by cooking authorities for all baked
L ARE PURE delicacies such as devil’s food, steamed pudding, lemon loaf cake. Our
^
Soda, a necessity in the kitchen, * s helpful throughout the home ... is often
t SODA # prescribed by physicians Keep an extra package in the medicine
. . .
has it. Just few cents package Mail the Business established
cabinet . . Your grocer a a . . . coupon. in the year 1846
a
Often When I Was Dragging My Weary Way to Bed, I Would Hear Him as I Passed His Suite, Dictating a Speech.
The Perils of Politics
By JAMES J. MONTAGUE
My service as a member of a cam¬ |
paign squad have been discontinued j
permanently. One ought to have
something in his past to look back
upon with gratitude because it is not
likely to occur again. Life, after all,
is enjoyable, but as far as we can be
sure, only while one is living it. I
survived once, but should a second
opportunity come to me to travel
about on the trail of a candidate, I
should politely but firmly leave it un¬
grasped.
In earlier days a man who had
been nominated to the high office to
whicli he aspired was carried from
town to town in a comfortable rail¬
road train, escorted to his hotel at
the head of a parade and later to the
hall in which he was to speak. Seat¬
ed in a comfortable horse-drawn car¬
riage he bowed to left and right and
waved his hand at the cheering mul¬
titudes ranged along the street to do
him honor. He made a speech at
noon and a speecli at night. Then
retired to his hotel, ate a comfortable
dinner, and spent an hour or two dis¬
cussing the situation with his local
supporters, after which he went to
bed and to sleep.
That pleasant and enjoyable rou¬
tine disappeared with the coming of
the automobile, and with the assist¬
ance, by party leaders, of whirlwind
campaigns. I have seen whirlwinds
In the West and have been awed by
them, and wished I was elsewhere.
But many days during my service as
the supporter of a candidate, I have
regarded the. days when sections of
barns and rural bridges and unhap¬
py cows and calves were spinning
I through the air as days to which I
would gladly return. For pep has
been put into politics.
Our candidate did not put it there,
perhaps, but he made no effort to re¬
move it. He Is one of those people
who likes to shake hands, and who
had learned how to get in the first
grip, so that his fingers will not be
wrung from him by his devoted ad¬
mirers. He has learned to write six
or seven speeches while he is driving
through the countryside at sixty or
seventy miles an hour, and to make
the one that seems best suited to the
it occasion when his local advisors call
I
the parade to a halt. And, after a
day that would leave a Bengal tiger
limp and panting, he thinks nothing
of sitting up till two or three In the
morning talking with his retinue
about what he ought to do tomorrow.
But it wasn’t so much that that
troubled me. It was the dash from
town to town or from countryside to
countryside In which we who fol¬
lowed his car in a huge reeling motor
bus had to participate. On some
days he was scheduled for six after¬
noon speeches in towns fifty or more
miles apart. After breakfast we, of
his following, would clamber into the
vast bus, take our seats, get a firm
hold on a strap, set our teeth, and
dash forth.
Ahead of us was the candidate,
listening to advisors who were giv¬
ing him tips as to what to talk about
to the next audience, and paying
DADE COUNTY TIMES: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1935
scant attention to them. Ahead of
him were other retainers, talking
over suggestions and plans to lay be¬
fore him, and ahead of them were
either two uniformed motorcycle po¬
licemen or a flivver containing state
policemen.
In ten minutes after the start we
were making fifty miles an hour. The
sirens on the police cars or cycles
shrieked like fire trucks racing
through a city, the limousines rocked
and swayed, and the motor bus
leaped from depression to depression
on the road like a giant jack rabbit.
Rural motorists, truck drivers, farm¬
ers, appalled at the din, drew up be¬
side the road and gazed at us with
paling faces as we sped by them.
Children raced beside the way
shrieking madly. Men and women
darted from farm houses and gaped
over the fences at us. But on we
rushed, unheeding.
Presently there was a signal from
the sirens ahead, the brakes ground
all along the array of cars, and we
came to a stop in front of a school
house or a town hall. Out hopped
the candidate, into the building he
rushed, made a five-minute speech,
paused to shake out-stretched hands,
then we all went into our equipages
and forth we embarked o'er the hard
high road. On one occasion we found
the audience consisted of children
who would have to wait for another
ten years before they attained voting
age. The candidate was a little tak¬
en aback, but he made a short
speech, asked them to tell their par¬
ents about it, and away we raced
again. We learned afterward that
by some mistake xve had got into the
wrong hall, but there was no time
to fuss about that.
Soon we began to glimpse church
spires and the tops of skyscrapers
over the trees and low hills, and
knew that a city was near. I sat
back with a sigh of gratitude. Here
at least the pace must slow. Not
even a political caravan could make
its way through city streets at sixty
miles an hour. I lit a cigar and pre¬
pared to take a few minutes of ease.
They were never taken. Outside
the city we slowed down, blit only to
exchange our rural guard for a covey
of city mounted policemen, and these
gentlemen had motor cycles, not
horses. Before I could catch a fresh
breath, they set their sirens going
continuously, and in their wake we
rocked and roared along, around cor¬
ners, over streets under repair and
down narrow lanes, never once slack¬
out gait. If we came closer to
a truck or a street car than the driv¬
ers had reckoned on, we merely shift¬
ed over a few feet while two wheels
hiped up on the sidewalk, scattering
startled pedestrains left and right,
and proceeded on our way.
How we ever got through, and how
a hundred people or so ever had the
to escape us, is something
that will forever remain a secret to
But we did it, and presently
flowing forth from the bus and
into a hotel.
But not to rest. Three minutes
after our arrival the candidate was
making a speech and shaking hands.
Five minutes later he was telling us
what would be his plans for the aft¬
ernoon. In another one minute we
were fortli and to the harvest field
again.
Night brought no respite. There
were two, and sometimes three
speeches, frantic battles to get into
the halls and out again, and often
dashes througli the night to some
suburban hall which the local boys
had forgotten for the nonce, but in¬
sisted must be visited. And through
all and each of those long days, the
candidate never turned a hair, never
faltered in a speech for an instant,
never failed to say something pleas¬
ant about the town and the people
In it, and never showed a sign of
fatigue.
Often when I was dragging my
weary way to bed in a hotel after
a terrific day, I would hear him as I
passed his suite dictating a speech
or discussing something with the na¬
tive political yeomanry. And at sev¬
en o’clock in the morning he was out
and ready again, his geniality unim¬
paired and his zest for battle keener
than ever.
On the last night that I accompa¬
nied the procession we returned to
town in a sleeping car which we
boarded at midnight. As I passed
his stateroom I heard him dictating,
“And, as I have said so many times
before, there are issues in tlds cam¬
paign which—” Then I went to my
berth and tried to get a little sleep.
In the morning I found him packing
away a solid breakfast. “Aren’t you
nearly all In?” I said.
“AH in?” he asked. “H—1 no. By
the way, if you see my secretary, ask
him to come in here. I’ve just
thought of something I ought to say
to the meeting I’m going to speak to
when we get into town.”
©. Bell Syndicate.—WNU Servlc*.
Home of the Shawl
The famous Paisley shawls were
manufactured at Paisley, In Scot¬
land. Thread was first made there
in 1722 and it was the scene of the
first manufactured handkerchiefs in
1743. The town is a short distance
from Glasgow.
YOU CANT BEAT (AND TH£ N£tU
THI5 FOR A [CAN IS SO €ASY
BARGAIN/ TO OP€N/
The regular of
price Baking'
Calumet
Powder is , . -( ;
now only *- I > J
25^0 P oun<
HELP SCIENTIFIC STUDY
Miniature earthquakes, created by
setting off small charges of dyna¬
mite, are helping scientists study
deep-lying rock structures of the
earth, says Popular Mechanics Mag¬
azine. Sensitive instruments re¬
cord vhe “earthquakes.” By study¬
ing tht- effects of these explosions it
is possible to locate accurately un¬
derlying strata of rock an deep ns
40,000 feet below the surface. The
apparatus also is used to locate
earthquake faults, to study the ve¬
locity with which earth tremors are
propagated, to locate oil shale and
to measure the depth of alluvial de¬
posits. Dynamite charges vary
from one to forty pounds. The ex¬
plosive and recording Instruments
are carried on a special truck out¬
fitted by scientists of the California
Institute of Technology.
Three Simple Steps
to Ease a Sore Throat
in Three Minutes
Modern Scientific Method
Wonderfully Easy
REMEMBER PICTURES HERE
Here’s a safe, modern and effective
way to relieve sore throat. A way
thet eases the pain, rawness and
| Crush and stir 3 BAYER Aspirin irritation in as little as two or threo
*• Tablets in glass of water. minutes. Many doctors advise it and
millions are following this way. Try it
All you do is crush and stir 3
BAYER Aspirin Tablets in K glasi
of water and gargle with it twice—
as pictured here. (If you have sign*
of a cold, take BAYER Aspirin and
drink plenty of water.)
Get real BAYER Aspirin Tablet*
n Gargle Thoroughly throw your for this purpose. They disintegral*
—
" head way back, allowing a little to quickly and completely, making a
trickle down your throat. Do this twice. gargle without irritating particles.
Do not rinse mouth.
BAYER Aspirin prices have been
decisively reduced, so there’s no
point now in accepting other tha*
the real Bayer article you want.
PRICES on Genuine Bayer Aspirin
directions in package, Radically Reduced on All Sisee
How Calotabs Help Nature
To Throw Off a Bad Cold
Millions have found in Calotabs a
most valuable aid in the treatment
of colds. They take one or two tab¬
lets the first night and repeat the
third or fifth night if needed.
How do Calotabs help Nature
throw off a cold? First, Calotabs are
one of the most thorough and de¬
pendable of all intestinal eliminants,
thus cleansing the intestinal tract of
the germ-laden mucus and toxines.
METROPOLITAN GRAND OPERA
direct from its New York Stage
3-Hour Broadcast by
LIST E R I N E
announced by
Geraldinf Farrar 1:45 P.M.
Every Saturday’ • all NBC stations
LOVE
Love Is a spiritual coupling of tw*
souls.—Ben Jonson.
T o Be Happy —*
You Must Be Welt
Enjoy the sturdy health that
SARGON
The powerful invigorating tonia
can bring. Get sound refreshing
sleep-—Eat with a keen hearty
appetite—Have that rugged starving glow
of health—Feed your
nerves and impoverished blood-
increase your bodily vigor and jjet
a new lease on life at once with
the help of this wonderful tonic,
Sargon is for sale by all good
Drug Stores.
Second, Calotabs are diuretic to the
kidneys, promoting the elimination
of cold poisons from the blood. Thu*
Calotabs serve the double purpose of
a purgative and diuretic, both of
which are needed in the treatment
of colds.
Calotabs are quite economical;
only twenty-five cents for the family
package, ten cents for the trial
package. (Adv.)