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THE REVIEW, HIGH POINT,. NORTH , CAROLINA CALOMEL SICKENS! IT SALIVATES! DON'T STAY BIU0US, CONSTIPATED I Guarantee "Dodson's Liver Tone" Will Give You the Best Liver and Bowel Cleansing . You Ever HadDon't Lose a Day's Work! Calomel makes you sick; you lose a day's work. Calomel is quicksilver and it salivates; calomel injures your liver. . - . If you are bilious, feel lazy, sluggish and all knocked out, if your bowels are constipated and your head aches or stomach is sour, just take a spoon ful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone instead of using sickening, salivating calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You'll know it next morning because you will wake up feeling fine, your liver will' be work ing, your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. You will feel like working. You'll be cheerful; full of vigor and ambition. Your druggist or dealer sells you a BO cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone Playing Safe. r "So you don't guide hunting parties any more?" "Nope," said the guide. "Got tired of being mistook for a deer." "How do you earn a living now?" "Guide fishin' parties. So fer no body ain't mistook me for a fish." To Drive Out Malaria - ' v And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 50 cents. Many a self-made man might be happier if he could blame the job on somebody else. SUDDEN Caused by Disease The close connection which exists between the heart and the kidneys is well known nowadays. As soon as kidneys are diseased, arterial tension is increased and the heart functions are attacked. When the kidneys no longer pour forth waste, uremic poi soning occurs, and the person dies and the cause is often given as heart dis ease, or disease of brain or lungs. It is a good insurance against such a risk to send 10 cents for a large trial package of "Anuric" the latest dis covery of Dr. Pierce. Also send a sample of your water. This will be examined without charge by expert chemists at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Ho tel, Buffalo, N. Y. When you suffer from backache, frequent or scanty urine, rheumatic pains here or there, or that constant tired, worn-out feel ing, it's time to write Dr. Pierce, de scribe your symptoms and get his f fU try ifTtJ We are the largest Uisr Mm W handlers of EGGS in the South. What have you to ship? The high est market price guar- i axiteed with quick returns. Give us a trial. Reference 1st National Bank. Richmond, Va. . WOODSON-CRAIG CO., .Commission Merchants Dept. B Richmond, Va. u The Reliable Remedy I I for lumbago, gout and I 1 RHEUmATSSr.l GETS AT THE JOINTS V FKOM THE INSIDE For sale by all jr Jr druggists r Ozark M others Used To Be Afraid To Go Now Sleep Soundly Since They Have Found a Sure Preventive For Croup. Many mothers, besides those of Ozark, Mo., have been afraid to sleep at night for fear of being awakened by that dread croupy cough. Mrs. H. H. Givan and Mrs. J. J. Cave, both of Ozark, have found, in common with many other Missouri mothers, that a jar of Vap-O-Rub in the house in sures a good night's sleep. Vap-O-Rub is the external treatment for all forms of croup or cold troubles, introduced here from the South last winter. It is in salve form and you just rub it over the throat and chest, covering with a warm flannel cloth. The body warmth releases antiseptic vapors that are inhaled with each breath, loosening the phlegm, and, in addition, Vick's is absorbed through and stimulates the skin, relieving the tightness and soreness. Croup is usu ally relieved in fifteen minutes, and a TRY THE OLD RELIABLE ERSEIITH's Chill Tom ic For MALARIA cLa 4 FINE GENERAL STRENGTHENING TONIC Ifl III w will pay high cash prices for new or used machines, such as Lathes, fihapers. Millers. Pners s . ... ..n jij.af.rlniaiia and price nnaers, etc. Will buy single machines or enure snops. aw - , . . J y-u know of machines for sale, write us. We wlK wablj commission for information leadin t business SEGAL MACHINERY EXPORTING CO. NfORK c 26 BROADWAY , -:: . ;j : ',-7 ? ,; . under my personal guarantee that It will clean your sluggish liver better than nasty calomel; it wont make you sick and you can eat anything you want without being salivated. Your druggist guarantees that each spoonful will start your liver, clean your bowels and straighten you up by morning or you can have your money back. Chil dren gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone because it is pleasant tasting and doesn't gripe or cramp or make them sick. I am selling millions' of bottles of Dodson's Liver Tone to people who have found that this pleasant, vege table, liver medicine takes the place of dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle on my-sound, reliable guarantee. Ask your druggist or storekeeper about me. Proof. "Are you sure the world is happier and better?" "Absolutely. Look at the people who used to make themselves miser able on bicycles and who are now riding in motorcars!" RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Bum, a small box of Barbo Compound, and H oz. of glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes the desired shade. Any drug gist can put this up or you can mix it at home at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and re moves dandruff. It is excellent for falling hair and will make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and does not rub off. Adv. Usually when a woman disapproves of her daughter's husband the honors are even. DEATH of the Kidneys medical opinion, without charge ab solutely free. This "Anuric" of Dr. Pierce's is 37 times more active than lithia, for it dissolves uric acid in the system, as hot water does sugar. Simply ask for Dr. Pierce's Anuric Tablets. There can be no imitation. Every package of "Anuric" is sure to be Dr. Pierce's. You will find the sig nature on the package just as you do on Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, the ever-famous friend to ailing women. Worry is" a frequent cause and sometimes a symptom of kidney dis ease. Thousands have testified to im mediate relief from these symptoms after using Dr. Pierce's Anuric Tablets for the kidneys and backache. . Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong, sick women well. No alcohol. Sold in tablets or liquid. Economy. "I saved twenty dollars this after noon." "How was that?" "Billson wanted to borrow twenty five and I lent him only five." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle ol CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Signature of LtrM&ii T" IV . In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Spain has opened an aviation school near Madrid in which the government aids those receiving instruction. Deep cuts should be healed by Han ford's Balsam. Adv. Wise is the girl who fears a man more than she does a mouse. To Bed At Night good application at night will, in al most every case, prevent a night at tack. But let Mrs. Givan speak for herself. She writes "I have used Vick's Vap-O-Rub on my little girl for croup. I rubbed it on her chest and throat and it is just splendid, and 1 wasn't afraid to go to bed at night." Mrs. Cave says "I find Vap-O-Rub the best thing' I have ever used for colds, sore throat, croup and all kinds of skin troubles for children. I could not do without it now, as It saves calling a doctor." The penetrative quality of Vick's makes it excellent also for inflamma tions of the, skin, such as burns, bruises, itchings, piles and muscular soreness. In these cases, particularly in cases of burns. It seems to draw out the inflammation and has a de lightfully cooling effect. Three sizes, 25c, 50c or $1.00. The Vicic Chemical Company, Greensboro, jm. j. ie Genuine has this Trade Marl PREVENTION' 'V better than cure. Tutfa Pills if taken In time are not only a remedy lor, but will prevent SICK HEADACHE, biliousness, constipation and kindred diseases. GARAGES, MACHINE SHOPS, manufacturers: C6 J?i 1 " Tiffs PRESIDENT Gill IKES HIS REPORT UNIVERSITY TRUSTEES MEET IN RALEIGH IN SEMI-ANNUAL EVENT. DISPATCHES FROM RALEIGH Doings and Happenings That Mark the Progress of North Carolina Peo .ple Gathered Around the State Capitol. Raleigh. The trustees of the University of North Carolina, in semi-annual sessioD in Raleigh, received the annual report of President E. K. Graham, covering the whole scope of the activities of the institution. In concluding this report President Graham said: "There have been, during the past year, many inspiring evidences that we are coming more and more to see that true loyalty to the University .consists not merely in pride in the institution, nor merely in love for it; but, also, and mainly, in our personal devotion to the high things for which the sinstitution stands, and our prac tical service in making these things prevail. The essential character of the institution is co-operation in its fullest- and -deepest sense. It is the Institution for expressing in intelli gent and constructive terms all of those varied aspects of human effort that make complete and unified the rights of the state. Adequate equip ment, therefore, to do its work with freedom and vigor it asks not in any selfish measure, but as the heart of the general good. If we view it in the lesser way of partisanship, wheth er friendly or unfriendly, we shall think too lightly of its mission, mis conceive its true character and poten tial greatness, and so fail to give it the means to perform its function with the strength, the vision, and the confident faith necessary to the lead ership committed to its case.1 In every particular, except that of physical equipment, the report shows a year of remarkable progress. - The registration to January 1 was 1,123. Including the Summer school the reg istration was 1,823. These figures represent a gain of over 300 the past jrear and of 886 over the registration of 1914. The report shows that 93.5 per cent of the regular students registered are North Carolinians, nine-tenths of the counties are represented in the regular term and all the counties are represented in a number of the activi ties. It is found that all professions and denominations patronize the Uni versity in their relative proportion. President Graham treats at length the growth and magnitude of the exten sion department, which is scoring sig nal success. 312 High Schools Enter Contest. Three hundred and twelve high schools in 93 counties of North Caro lina have enrolled with Secretary E. R. Rankin for the approaching con tests of the High School Debating Union. The triangular debates will be held throughout the state on March 31st ,and the final contest far the Aycock Memorial Cup will be hejd. in Chapel Hill on April 14th. The contests of the Union from first to last will be participated in by fully 2,000 student debaters, and the total audiences will number 75,000 North Carolinians. Buncombe county leads the state with an enrollment of 13 schools. Robeson comes next with 12, and Guilford follows with 10. Alamance has 9 and Mecklenburg 8. Johnston, Nash and Wake have 7 each. Gaston, Iredell and Union have 6 each. Beau fort, Durham, Cleveland, Rockingham, Rowan, Scotland, Vance, Warren and Wayne have 5 each enrolled. Dr.- Rankin Named Delegate. Dr. W. S. Rankin, secretary of the North Carolina state board of health, was appointed by Governor L(Ocke Craig as delegate from this state to the Congress on Medical Education, Public Health and Medical Licensure in Chicago on February 7 and 8. Boys and Girls Get Literature. Special from Washington. The boys and girls of North Carolina have near ly cleaned out the document room of certain articles on preparedness said a clerk recently The mails of both senators and representatives have been filled with letters calling for in formation with which to prepare for the great state-wide debate on wheth er or not the United States should adopt a policy of greatly enlarging its navy. Many of the congressmen have been receiving from 10 to 15 let ters daily. Calls Attention to Laws. Insurance Commissioner James R. Young announced that hereafter no license will be issued to any person who has heretofore been licensed as an insurance agent until ten days af ter application has' been filed. This is to enable the commission to get the data required by law in such cases. At the same time the insur ance commissioner is . sending out notices and copies of the law requir ing persons in the: state Insuring in unlicensed companies to remit fire per cent to the commissioner. Will Safeguard State's Interest. ; ; Governor Craig .and the Council of State directed Attorney General T. W. Bickett to take whatever steps are necessary to conserve the interests of the state in the Mattamuskett Railroad Company roadbed as graded some years ago by state; convicts. The sit uation is that certain interests have procured a judgment against the com pany foi f 470 accumulated fixed char ges, and are moving for an order of court for a foreclosure sale under the Judgment. Attorney" General Bickett's instruc tions are to arrange to take care of this judgment in whatever way it may be possible to avert any sacrifice of the state's stock in the railroad. There is at this time no indication whatever of any early equipment of the road for passenger and freight service. However, it is believed that the property will assume very much increased value as soon" as the mam moth drainage scheme for the lake bed and Buroundlng lands is accom plished. This means the reclamation of 100,000 acres, 50,000 in the lake bed and 50,000 adjacent swamps. J. P. Kerr, private secretary to Governor " Craig, . who is one of the commissioners for this development, says the , drainage equipment should be completed and the pumping station fully installed within 90 days, or four months at most. The machinery of the pumping plant that will lift the water into the canal that will convey it to the sound is now being put in place. The pumps will have the ca pacity of 15,(500 gallons a second, or this means something like 1,250,000 000 gallons per day. The Mattamuskeet Railroad practi cally encircles this Mattamuskeet de velopment and it is believed that the roadbed must ultimately be of very great value to the locality and the state. Prepares for Spring Term Court. Clerk J. L. Seawell of the Supreme Court is rounding out the preliminary work for the convening of the court for the Spring "term on Monday, Feb ruary 7. Special effort is being made to direct attention to the fact that in future applicants for license to practice law are required to file their certificates and the checks for license tax and registration fee on or before February 4. This rule is to be rigid ly enforced. Warning to Insurance Agents. Commissioner of Insurance James R. Young is giving notice to all com panies and agents, doing fire Insur ance business that it is not permis sible in this state for commissions to be divided, except with regularly licensed insurance agents or brokers, and that the law does not allow, more than five per- cent to non-resident brokers, and that only when the brokers are licensed to do business ir Ciis state. Graham Speaks to Livestock Men. Maj. W. A. Graham, commissioner of agriculture, returned from Salis bury where he delivered an address before the North Carolina Livestock Association in session there. The com missioner is deeply interested in im pressing on the farmers of the state the advantage and necessity of rais ing their own meat supply as well as their grains and other products for home maintenance. Three Officers Commissioned. Adjutant General Young of the North Carolina National Guard issued commissions to three hew officers for the medical department of the guard. Dr. Houston B. Haitt, High Point, first lieutenant, will be assigned to Field Hospital Corps, No. 1, Asheville, as will Dr. John Y. McConnell of Dav idson College, while Dr. John E. Ray of Raleigh, first lieutenant, is assign ed to headquarters in Raleigh. High School Fund Apportioned. The apportionment of $75,000 public high school fund has just been an nounced from the state department of education and Mr. C. E. Mcintosh has been bu.sy preparing for the distribu tion of the amounts set apart for the various high schols. Teachers to Meet In Raleigh. The executive committee of the Teachers' Assembly reached a devi sion to hold the 1916 session In Ral eigh. There is still some question as to the date, but the sentiment was for detaining Thanksgiving week. Dr. Pratt Delighted With Success. Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt, state geolo gist, has just returned from New Bern where he attended the meeting of the North Carolina Forestry Association. He was delighted with the success of the meeting and for the promise it gave of future achievements. "One feature absolutely unexpect ed," said Dr. Pratt when in Raleigh, "was the subscription in less than ten minutes of $350 by the lumber men present. This is to be given anriually for two years to aid the for estry work in the state." ' New Enterprises Chartered. The Carolina Cyrup Company, Ra leigh, capital $10,000 authorized, and $2,100 subscribed. " The company will manufacture syrups, fruit extracts and other fountain supplies. The Calypso , Supply Company, Calypso, . Duplin county, capital $25, 000 authorized, and $6,000 ' subscribed. The "company .-will do a mercantile business , ' The C: Li. Fountain Company, Leg getts, Kdgecbmbe county, $50,000 cap ital authorized, and $10,OOOsubscribMd for a mercantile business. . . ; She Had the Evidence . , , I "He ; doesn't like my ' cooking," sobbed the three months' bride, a tear on her long lashes VI just know he doesn't. So there!" ' "What . makes your think so?" her mother asked-; "Has' "he , said he doesn't like your cooking?" ' "N-no-o," stammered the bride. "Nonsense, child, it's Just ", your imagination. I felt there was no ba sis " ... . , . "There is a basis," the bride in sisted, tearfully. "I had been cooking the loveliest things for him for about two weeks, and then he told me he had decided to become - a raw-food faddist. Boo-hoo-o-oo!" Judge. Nice Enough, But . A ? twelve-year-old boy, who had reigned supreme over parents .and household all through his dozen years, was surprised one morning to hear the cry of a little baby brother. "Isn't it nice, Tommy," said the jubilant father, "that we have another baby?" "Yes, it is nice, father," said Tom my, as he saw the end of his reign; "but what bothers me is, was it nec essary?" ITCHING, BURNING SCALPS Crusted With Dandruff Yield Readily to Cuticura. Trial Free. Cuticura Soap to cleanse the scalp of dandruff crustings and scalings, and Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal Itchings and irritations. Nothing bet ter, surer or more economical than these super-creamy emollients for hair and scalp troubles of young or old. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. The man who talks loudest on a street corner is apt to be dumb as an oyster when at home. Alabama Man Says Tetter! ne Cures Eczema. Morvin, Ala., August 1, 1908. I received your Tetterine all -O. K. I have used it for Eczema and Tetter, Ring worms, Old Sores and Risings and can gladly recommend It as a sure cure. J. R. DeBride. Tetterine cures Eczema. Tetter. Boils, Ring Worm, Dandruff, Cankered Scalp, Bunions, Itching Piles. Chilblains and ev ery form of Scalp and Skin Disease. Tet terine 50c; Tetterine Soap 25c. At drug gists or by mail direct from The Shup trlhe Co., Savannah, Qa. With every mail order for Tetterine we give a box of Shuptrine's 10c Liver Pills free. Adv. Man wants but little hear below if the people occupying the flat above him own a piano.- Ec-Zene Kills Eczema. Let us prove it. Accept no substitute. If your Druggist does not have it, write to Ec-Zene Co., St. Paul, Minn. Adv. . . There are a lot of funny things In this world besides men and women. Obstinate sores should be cured by Hanford's Balsam. Adv. Fortunate is he who sees the point of a Joke instead of feeling it. For Forty Years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has Been Woman's Most Reliable Medicine Here is More Proof To women who are suffering from some form of woman's special ills, and have a constant fear of breaking, down, the three following letters ought to bring hope: Pinkham remedies." Mrs. Matmb Testimony from Oklahoma Lawton, Okla. "When I began to take Lydia E. PinkhamV Vegetable Compound I seemed to be good for nothing. I tired easily and had headaches much of the time and was irregular. I took it again before my little child was born and it did me a wonderful amount of good at that time. I never fail to recommend Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coirroound to ailing women because it has done so much for me." Mrs. L. MoCasland, 609 Have St, Lawton, Okla. From a Grateful Massachusetts Woman. Rpxbury, Mass. aI was suffering from inflam mation and was examined by a physician who found that my trouble was caused by a displacement. My symptoms were bearing down pains, backache, and sluggish liver. I tried several kinds of medi cine; then I was asked to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It has cured me and I am pleased to be in my usual good health by using it and -highly recommend it." Mrs. B. M. Osgood, 1 Haynes Park, Roxbury, Mass. If you want , special advice E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidence. ' . y . :- TONIC Well? , 'What would you give to be ; perfectly well? All you have got, of course. It may be that your trouble is of a catarrhal nature. Catarrh of the head. Catarrh of the stomach. Ca tarrh of some internal organ. If so, Peruna will help you on the road to perfect health. If you want to be convinced, buy one bottle. No further argu ment will be necessary. Coughs Colds Catarrh PERUNA TONIC For Rftetimafic Pains Yager's Liniment, the great ex ternal remedy for rheumatism, neuralgia, sprains, bruises or congestion, gives prompt relief from pain. LMQW Mr. John Aberman, Claremont Mills, Md., writes: "For four years I suffered with rheumatism and had to walk on -crutches. The doctor said my case was chronic and incurable but I tried Yager's Liniment with sat isfactory results. It is the bestlini- ' ment to relieve pain that I ever used. Its action Is prompt and effective.'! Put up fn large bottles containing eight ounces. Sold by all dealers 25c a, bottle. Prepared by GILBERT BROS. & CO. Inc. Baltimore, Md. W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 6-1916. PERUNA Are lorn North Crandon, Wis. a When I was 16 years? old I got married and at 18 years I gave birth to twins and it left me with very poor health. I could not walk across the floor without having to sit down to rest and it was hard for me to keep about and do my work. I went to a doctor and ne told me I had a displacement and ulcers, and would have to have an operation. This frightened me so much that I did not know what to do. Having heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I thought I would give it a trial and it made me as well as ever. I cannot sav enough in favor of tha Asbach, Korth, Crandon, Wis, i write to juyaia "A t - ro!?."-V',-"" r"