Newspaper Page Text
Foreign Words ^ ®
and Phrases
Caetera desunt. (L.) The re¬
mainder is wanting.
Lingua Toscana in bocca Ro
mana. (It.) The Tuscan speech on
Roman lips; i. e., the most cor¬
rect Italian.
Pleno jure. (L.) With full power.
Quo jure? (L.) By what right?
Au fait. (F.) Well informed;
master of; skilled.
En arriere. (F.) In the rear;
backward; behind.
Lares et penates. (L.) House¬
hold gods.
Ore rotundo. (L.) With full ut¬
terance.
Principiis obsta. (L.) Withstand
beginnings.
Sans gene. (F.) Without em¬
barrassment.
Tout au contraire. (F.) Quite
the contrary.
Similia similibus curantur. (L.)
Like things are cured by like.
Via media. (L.) A middle
course.
IF COLD
0 0
is in
YOUR
CHEST
do this now
Before you go to bed rub
Penetro on your chest and
throat, then apply hot cloth.
Relief quickly follows because
Penetro is stronger, contains
113% to 227% more medica¬
tion than any other nationally
sold cold salve.
And because Penetro has a
base of mutton suet, it con¬
serves and concentrates body
heat to enable this stronger
medication to help nature break
up congestion. The aromatic
vapors of Penetro also help to
relieve stuffiness and.soothe
the inflamed area.
Ask your druggist for PENETRO.
25c, 35c, 50c and $1 jars.
Exaggerate Our Lot
We exaggerate misfortune and
happiness alike. We are- never
neither so wretched or so happy
as we say we are.—Balzac.
A Three Days’ Cough
Is Your Danger Signal
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
cold or bronchial irritation, you can
get relief now with Creomulsion.
Serious trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with anything less than Creomul¬
sion, which goes right to the seat
of the trouble to aid nature to
soothe and heal the inflamed mem¬
branes as the germ-laden phlegm
is loosened and expelled.
Even if other remedies have
failed, don’t be discouraged, your
druggist is authorized to guarantee
Creomulsion and to refund your
money if you are not satisfied with
results from, the very first bottle.
Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)
A Case of “Nerves”
Mrs, S. C. Boykins of
201 W. Davie St, Raleigh,
N. C,, %aid: “I was ‘ail
nerves,’ I couldn’t stand
any noise or excitement,
had lost my appetite and
weighed only 90 pounds. I
couldn't sleep well at night
and felt weak and ex
haasted. I decided to take
Dr, _ Favorite
Pierce’s Prescription as a tonic
and soon noticed a decided change, my
appetite was increased and then I could feel
myself New size, gaining tablets daily.” Buy liquid now! $1.00 & $1.35.
50c..
A single dose of Dr. Peery's "Dead Shot”
expels worms. Tones up the stomach and
bowels. No after purgative 60c. necessary.
All Druggists.
Dr Peery’s
Dead vSnSB Shot for WORMS O ff r
Wrfehts Pill Co., 100 Gold Street. N. T. City
A HOTEL OF DISTINCTION
Nearest the Gardens
(Famous Winter Resort)
OPEN JANUARY TO MAT
S. John Littlegreen. Mgr
Summervil I e„.
South Carolina »
. BARTON
Chronic Arthritis.
TX/ HEN we see so many individ
uals crippled with rheuma¬
tism we may wonder what chance
they have of living for any length
of time. Unable to use certain
joints, suffering more or less pain
at times or all the time, the effect
upon their appetite, digestion, bow¬
el activity, and outlook on life is
bound to affect their health and
liltilf*' ....... "* HI
" *
Dr. Barton
1 arthritic or rheumatic
symptoms had existed for less than
five years were not included in this
study. The duration of the rheu¬
matic symptoms ranged from five
to twenty years.
In any group of so-called arthritic
patients 68 per cent (about 7
in 10) can be assured of im¬
provement. The remaining 32 per
cent or 3 in 10 are the ones which
Dr. Nissen states physicians should
carefully study, keeping a careful
record so as to be able to measure
or compare the changes in the
course of the arthritis.
Knowledge Worth the Effort.
This may mean patience and ef¬
fort but the knowledge gained will
be worth the effort expended if it
proves to show the degree of arthri¬
tic disturbance, and what the fu¬
ture holds out in the way of en¬
couragement for the patient.
It is only by this long patient ef¬
fort that the physician can really
know whether his care of the case
has been good, bad or indifferent.
There is no question but the above
advice is sound because when an
ailment is an old or chronic one
such as arthritis, the patient, find
the physician also, are apt to try
various treatments for short periods
of time in an endeavor to get or
give quick relief.
The treatment of rheumatism or
arthritis today consists of the re¬
moval of any infection (in teeth,
tonsils, sinuses, gall bladder, intes¬
tine), diet—starch foods are cut
down; application of heat in some
form followed later by massage;
the moving or manipulation of the
joints; and the use of drugs known
as the salicylates.
Thus with 7 out of 10 arthritic
patients assured of improvement in
their condition, and the other 3 in
10 receiving careful supervision and
treatment, the outlook for length of
time and enjoyment of life for ar
thritics is encouraging.
* * *
The Building-Up Foods.
In the early days of the automo¬
bile many of the women of the
country and the villages cast covet¬
ous eyes on the sleek, well-fed
well rounded women of the city who
went by in the open automobiles of
those days. “If those women had
as much work and worry as I have
they would not look so smooth,
sleek and placid.”
And today, we find that our wom¬
en of the country and village, and
even of the city itself are not at
all anxious to look sleek, well fed
and plump. In fact as two of
every five of our adult population
are believed to be overweight, it
would seem that perhaps a little
more work and worry would pre¬
vent the increase in weight.
Naturally then for one who wishes
to increase weight the main thought
is rest, light exercise to induce ap¬
petite and prevent constipation, and
a little extra food, rich in food
value. “Rest, relaxation and fresh
air are important parts of the
day’s schedule if the diet is to be
successful in increasing weight.”
However, despite the fact that
a tendency to thinness or leanness
seems to run in some families,
many individuals are underweight
because of some infected teeth or
tonsils, chronic sinus infection or
tuberculosis—that is, some underly¬
ing slow or low infection. Thus be¬
fore going on a diet rich in cal¬
ories (high caloric), a diligent
search for the cause of the under¬
weight should be made by a phy¬
sician and dentist. If no infection
can be found, then a diet 25 to 53
per cent richer than at present
should be taken because under¬
weight means a reduction of the
reserves—energy reserves—of the
body. An underweight cannot fight
an illness or infection as well as if
he were of normal weight, nor is he
capable of doing as much physical
or mental work.
The idea of a rich or high caloric
diet is to make sure that the food
contains all the materials needed
for the various tissues of the body,
and to this is added a further
amount of food to build extra tissue
or to replace tissue that has been
lost.
As mentioned before, starch and
fat foods are the great energy giv¬
ers, and proteids—meats, eggs, fish,
cereals—are the great builders or
rebuilders.
Copyright.—WNU Service.
length of life.
Dr. H. A. Nissen,
Boston, in the
Maine Medical
Journal attempts to
standardize, at least
roughly, the length
of time the rheu¬
matic or arthritic
patient is likely to
live. The clinical
course of 500 ar
thritic patients was
charted and ana¬
lyzed. The cases
CLEVELAND COURIER
Of INTEREST TO
THE HOUSEWIFE
A tablespoonful of vinegar will
soften glue that has become hard¬
ened in a bottle.
* * *
A pinch of alum added to the
water when washing blue or green
articles of clothing will prevent
the colors from running.
• * *
The stock left from cooked spin¬
ach makes a valuable addition to
vegetable soup.
• * •
Oatmeal on a dampened cloth is
excellent for cleaning white paint.
* * *
Two or three slices of bacon
placed on top of a liver loaf dur¬
ing baking adds to the flavor.
© Associated Newspapers.—"WNU Service.
only LUDEN'S
MENTHOL COUGH DROPS
will do these 3 things...
and all for . . . 5/
Clear your head
0 Soothe your throat
Q Help build up your
ALKALINE RESERVE
WHEN A COLD STRIKES i
Nature’s Hymns
Flowers are Nature’s hymns,
with which in her inspiration, she
greets the sun.—Heine.
A \ 1
n J §|j Up f
When Consolidated
Human thought is one of the
most dynamic forces on earth.
Don’t Irritate
Gas Bloating
If you want to really GET RID OF
GAS and terrible doctoring bloating, don’t expect
to do it bv Just your stom¬
ach with harsh, irritating alkalies and
“gas tablets.” Most GAS is lodged in
the stomach and upper intestine and
is due to old poisonous matter in the
constipated bowels that are loaded
with ill-causing constipation bacteria. is of long stand¬
If your quantities of
ing. enormous dangerous diges¬
bacteria accumulate. Then your
tion is upset. GAS often presses heart
and lungs, making life miserable.
You can’t eat or sleep. Your head
aches. Your back aches. Your com¬
plexion is sallow and pimply. Your
breath is foul. You are a sick, grouchy,
wretched, unhappy person. YOUR
SYSTEM IS POISONED.
Thousands of sufferers have found in
Adlerika the quick, scientific way to
rid their systems of harmful bacteria.
Adlerika rids you of gas and cleans
foul poisons out of BOTH upper and
lower bowels. Give your bowels a
REAL cleansing with Adlerika^, gripe Get
rid of GAS. Adlerika does not
—is not habit forming. At all Leading
Druggists.
SORES, BOILS
ATHLETE'S FOOT, BURNS,
“
CUTSandITCHING SKIN
AT YOU* LOCAL 08UG STO«i
i or POSTPAID e« ol pries
Bowson Chemical P*ooucts Co.
v / JACKSONVILLE ..FLORIDA
Difficult Word
One word is the secret of most
financial independence: No.
Miss
REE LEEF
o says
Ccpudine
Atelievei
NEURALGIC PAIN
quidwibecauM, i& Liquid..,
ALREADY DISSOLVED*
LARGE SIZE
$ 1.20
VA recognized Remedy (or Rheumatic 1,
and Neuritis sufferers. A perfect Blood
Purifier Makes thin Blood Rich and
Healthy. Builds Strength and Vigor.
Always Effective . . Why suffer?
.AT ALL GOOD DRUG STORES
WNU—7 9—37
MORNING DISTRESS
is due to acid, upset stomach.
Miinesia wafers (the orig¬
inal) quickly relieve acid
stomach and give necessary
elimination Each wafer
equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk
of magnesia. 20c, 35c & 60c.
Bol
Davi/
Joys and Tribulations of a Trailer
—A Moment’s Halt.
FAYETTEVILLE. ARK.
Q UNDOWN ;,the evening crisp
and clear and the Ozarks
still clothed in the red-brown
garb of autumn, uncertain of
the nearness of winter. Two
miles beyond the city, against
the sloping hill nestled Gayeta
Lodge, the home of Charles J.
Finger, whom all readers of
good books know for his writ¬
ings on American frontiers,
South America, Africa, along
the Gold Coast and the seven
seas.
A strange man, this Finger, a
modern Marco Polo, born in Eng¬
land in the latter ’60s who con¬
trived while yet in his ’teens to
wander from his native land and
go adventuring with no thought
save to see and hear and know
things that lure restless souls to
the frontiers of other countries, to
the wild coasts of distant countries.
Educated for a career in music,
steeped in the world’s operas,
tained for the concert stage, he
answered only the call of the open
road and went wandering. At the
peak of his young manhood h e
turned up in St. Louis, took up rail¬
road construction, accepted the
management of a group of lines
penetrating the new country, mar¬
ried and prepared to settle down to
a stationary life among directors,
stockholders and business builders,
but still clinging to his music for
after-hour recreation.
In the midst of this new en¬
vironment, which was never to his
liking, Charles Finger, his head
filled with romantic reflections
born of his youth, turned to writ¬
ing the stories he had lived in days
gone by. William Maroon Rqedy,
then at the zenith of his fame as
editor of the St. Louis Mirror, be¬
gan to buy manuscripts of the rail¬
roader. It was not long after
Finger turned his attention to the
written word that Reedy sought
out his occasional contributor and
made him a regular feature of the
Mirror’s index. So thoroughly qt
home was Finger in the literary
pool under Reedy’s direction that
he became associate editor of the
weekly and as well the confidant
of its founder.
Death of the Mirror.
Into the discard, gradually, to be
sure, but in the end completely
overboard, went the railroading
ambitions of the man who from
childhood had been exploring for
his ideal. The final dramatic de¬
cision was brought about when
Reedy, upon deciding to take a
vacation, put Finger in charge of
the Mirror with absolute editorial
authority during this absence.
From that vacation Billy Reedy
never returned. Death had over¬
taken him on his brief fur¬
lough from the desk where for
many years he radiated with bril¬
liance. Without Reedy, there
could be no permanent Mirror.
Finger, quite aware of the relation
that the founder bore to the paper,
assisted in the termination of the
publication, closed its eyes, as it
were, and joined the mourners,
legion wherever men of brains
gathered.
Inoculated with the impulse to
carry on with naught but the pen
for his guerdon, Finger withdrew
from his railroad and commercial
connections, gathered up his wife
and five children, moved bag and
baggage to Fayetteville, Arkansas,
and settled down for good. He put
his three sons and two daughters
through the University of Arkan¬
sas, meanwhile slowly accumulat¬
ing a few hundred acres of farm¬
land. He built houses and barns
to conform with his views of what
a homestead should contain of
creature comforts.
Squire Is Hospitable.
We four, Luana, Stephen, Gypsy,
a Scotty dog, and the writer, all
old friends of the Fayetteville sage,
unannounced, but by the grace of
God not unwelcome, filed across
the threshold of his Arkansas
home and sat in a semi-circle
around the oak logs glowing
among the andirons that with his
own hands Charles Finger long
ago had placed in the hearth.
Not the least bit disturbed by
the arrival of invaders, the Finger
family opened their hearts, offer¬
ing a program that would have
kept us at Gayeta for a full week.
“One day,” said Stephen, who is
the Lord Kitchener of Our Rum¬
ble Home, “and we sleep under
our own roof, departing tomorrow
after breakfast.” And so it was.
Squire Finger, with true appre¬
ciation for dramatic incident, es¬
corted Stephen and me into a
stone spring house where a fif¬
teen-pound gobbler, his eyes closed
in the last sleep, hung in the cool
atmosphere essential to the air con¬
ditioning of a turkey intended for
the table.
“This national bird for tonight’s
banquet,” quoth the Squire, “with
cranberries from a nearby bog,
and hard cider crushed from ap¬
ples from yonder hillside ...”
©—WNU Service.
'| First .3]; Stlmnqs ‘ n 1. oi Spnng I ’
($530194, ' “F”
- ‘ W ' z. ,fiu‘éf
. 3%: "3/ ‘ ' * - . . ‘ 49’ // N \
!'l./<B i" 35%;; -. : xgéki‘fifia
€5,703! gm! f $1 gig, “mpg
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‘III ' ' V
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b , 1263
,
,
'T'HE chic young miss above, een
ter, says, “I make my own
clothes. I learned sewing from
Mother first, got a touch of it in
school, and a real exposure in
4-H activities. I choose this dress
for Spring because it looks like
Spring, and because it takes the
minimum of time and money. Puff
sleeves and princess lines give a
formal note if I wish to impress
the folks (which I often do) and
the peplum jacket is added for
frivolous reasons.—when I want to
..feel a bit sophisticated, and it
a sweet all-occasion
dress.”
-A Practical Choice.
The Lady on the Left says, 'Tm*
practical. I choose patterns that
I can cut twice; then I have a
gingham gown to set me off in my
kitchen and an afternoon dress in
which to entertain the Maggie
Jiggs club. The all-of-a-piece yoke
and sleeves make me look years
younger, the shirred pockets give
the decorative note every dress
needs, and I can run it up in an
afternoon.”
Three-Purpose Pattern.
The Girl in the Oval has a far¬
away look in her eyes. She says
it’s because she wears glamorous
blouses like this one. She cuts her
pattern three times—no less—and
evolves a blouse in eggshell for
her velvet skirt; one in velveteen
for her tweeds, and the third in
metallic cloth for after-five activi¬
ties. “The skirt with its simple
well directed lines is equally well
suited to tweeds for sport, velvet
for dress and wool for business,”
says Madam.
The Patterns.
Pattern 1832 (above left) comes
in sizes 32 to 44. Size 34 requires
4% yards of 39 inch material.
Pattern 1263 (above center) is
designed in sizes 12 to 20 (30 to 40
bust). Size 14 requires 4% yards
of 39 inch material for the dress
and 214 yards for the jacket—to
line it requires 214 yards of 35
inch material.
Pattern 1958 (above right) is
available in sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 46
bust). Size 16 requires 2% yards
for the blouse in 39 inch material
and 2 yards of 54 inch material
for the skirt.
New Pattern Book.
Send for the Barbara Bell
Spring and Summer Pattern
Book. Make yourself attractive,
practical and becoming clothes,
selecting designs from the Bar¬
bara Bell well-planned, easy-to
make patterns. Interesting and
exclusive fashions for little chil¬
dren and the difficult junior age;
slenderizing, well-cut patterns for
My 'TcLvolite
Recipe By
Dorothy Dix
Writer
Barbecue Chicken
Broil the chickens in the usual
way and when they are dished
pour over them this sauce:
Melt two tablespoonfuls of but¬
ter in a saucepan, add the same
quantity of vinegar, a teaspoonful
of made mustard, a strong dash of
tobasco, a teaspoonful of Worces¬
tershire sauce, a teaspoonful of
sugar, a saltspoonful of salt and
half as much pepper. Blend all
together, heat to a boil and pour
over chickens. Serve in 5 minutes.
©—WNU Service.
the mature figure; afternoon
dresses for the most particular
young women and matrons and
other patterns for special occa¬
sions are all to be found in the
Barbara Bell Pattern Book. Send
15 cents today for your copy.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1020,
211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111.
Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
DON’T TAKE
UNKNOWN REMEDIES
15C FOR 12
2 FULL DOZEN
DEMAND
AND GET
GENUINE
BAYER ASPIRIN
Need Privacy
Sometimes the great must envy
nobodies whom the public. let
alone.
wastes . that . accumulate frequently caused in by poi
. sonous Too often the bowels.
relief See for people merely use spme temporary
yoursel f i f 1 1 doesn’t make a world
of difference m the way you feel after using a
purely trial vegetable Nature’s Remedy laxative. Give a thorough
to (NR Tablets). Note
how gentle they r are—and are—and non-habit non-habit forming. forming.
Get a 25c box, -
tablets, containing 25 I
at any
drugstore.
Sometimes It’s Pleasure
In combining business with
pleasure, one or the other suffers.
.Health-Wrecking Functional
PAINS
Severe functional pains of men¬
struation, cramping spells and jan¬
gled nerves soon rob a woman of her
natural, youthful freshness. PAIN
lines in ,.a .woman’s face too often
grow into AGE lines!
Thousands of women have found
it helpful to take Cardui. They say
it seemed to ease their pains, and
they noticed an increase in their
appetites and finally n strengthened
resistance to the discomfort of
monthly periods.
Try Cardui. Of corn-self It doesn’t
help you, see your doctor.
Some Justification
We love a boaster when he’s got
what it takes.
Moro* HA,n
SNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JEltY
Believe the Ads
They Offer You'SpecialInducements
# Sometimes in the
matter of samples which, when proven
worthy, the merchandise can be pur¬
chased from our community merchants.