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I JACKSON COUNTY JOURNAL, SYLVA, N. C. To abort: a ccM and prevent com- lications, take The purified and refined calomel tablets that are r&usealess, safe and sure Medicinal virtues retain ed and improved. Sold only in sealed packages. Price 35 c. it Uaed 50 years I OltC witnout a change. The Good Old Mtll v c Fashioned kind IllCr O that never fails. Unequalled for LlVer Biliousness, Sick neaaacne, ionsn pation and Mala ria. Your Grand Pills father relied on - p . them. Nothing J.UC better at any price. Get the genuine. At all dt ucsiita. Manfd. by pi.lk Millet DruR Co.. Inc., lUchinond. Va. IE Kills chiHs ulls andlj f fevers.!! nic All' ia tor. V keeps off Fine tonic At your drug store. for 60c Money back if no relief. If. i i t a r a MTrrn i ... tviaae ana ai-vi i ecu dv BEHRENS DRUQ CO., Waco. Texas. - - - - ' -' Both Possible. "Miulnme La Mode has the nerve to call her department for young girls dresses n perfect model of style." "Why nerve?" "lU'ciiwse Is It a miss-fit establish ment." CHILLS, GOLDS, FEVERISHNESS 0 Black-Draught Is Used by Virginia Lady for Colds, Fever and Other Troubles With Fine Results. Rocky Mount, Va. Miss Mae Chit wood, of this place, recently stated : "I have used Black-Draught for colds and stomach trouble and certainly have found It very satisfactory. When I would feel bad and fever ish, as though I was taking a fresh cold, I would make a good cup of Black-Draught tea and it would soon set me all right. I can recommend it as a splendid laxative and gladly do so. You may publish my statement." When you feel chilly, tired, fever ish, headachy and fear that you are taking cold, take a good dose of the eld, reliable, liver medicine you have heard so much about Thedford's . Black-Draught. It i3 made from purely vegetable ingredients, acts in a gentle, natural way, and by helping to drive out poisonous waste matter from your system, it will often, if ! taken in time, prevent a chill from de veloping into a cold. Thousands of people, during the past 70 years, have found Black-Draught of benefit In such cases. Try it, the next time you chill or snooze. Adv. High Prices and Low Diet. Doctor "It is a little difficult to !I"-th s( your case. Perhaps you have h'en mating too much." Patient "Im r"ssU,.. This hotel is run on the Eu r"l nn plan." Many person imagine that Worms or Tape worm cannot be gotten rid of entirely, inwe who have used "Dead Shot" Dr. fery'a Vermifuge, know that they can. Adv. Preventive for Cold Feet. A rcn-nt patent covers a shoe to cure crM u-ot, a heated plate being insert '' '.! the heat being retained by the close-fitting construction of the shoe iik I p. Niht "d Nornins ft M ' - veeoVoiir Fvfeq mm Clescr, Clear -4 Healthy vit r rrM Ey Cr Book Kuriam Co. Chicago. President Hough of Northwestern University Gives Impressions Gained in Study of Conditions in Great Britain Anxiety Over Economic Situation Labor ProbSem Will Be Solved Through Briton's Genius for Compromise. Chicago. President Lynn Harold Hough of Northwestern university re cently returned from England, where he spent the summer speaking in lead ing churches and holding conferences with many educational and intellectu al leaders. In reply to a question as to the attitude of England toward America President Hough said: "The typical Englishman of serious and informed mind believes very profoundly in Anglo American friendship. Many men such as Mr. Fisher, the president of the English board of education, have been ready to express their belief that it Is the hope of the world. There is widespread anxiety about the econom ic situation. With a great debt to America and the balance of trade the wrong way, many Englishmen are very grave as they speak of the outcome. In England with a population of over forty millions there Is the possibility of producing food for something like thirteen millions. The rest of the food must in the long run come from ex change for English products which other countries desire. Would Cancel War Debt. "Some men feel that if America would cancel the war debt of Britain it would be a decisive step in pro ducing the right situation. They feel that America came into the war late, and such treatment of Britain and the other allies would be a noble contri bution of wealth from a nation which did not, as events unfolded, have to make so large a sacrifice of men as did Britain and France. Some men with a dash of adventure in their es timate of the situation take the view that the dangers are overestimated and that England will quickly recuper ate. I heard Lord Beaverbrook, who was on the Mauretania going over, ex press this view. It is probable that a matter about which little has been said will influence the actual outcome. England has had a long and success ful experience in international bank ing, and before even resourceful Americans learn the psychological trick of it, Britain will probably be competing with America on more even terms. And this is to the advantage of America. No business man able to look into the future would want to break down England's fundamental economic strength even if such a thing were possible." Labor Unrest in England. When asked about the labor unrest In England Dr. Hough replied: "At times this summer the situation has been very grave indeed. But an American needs to remember three things if he would estimate it wisely. The first is that there is a fundn- Would Hunt Murmansk Mosquitoes for Ivory Kem, Russian Lapland. American railway forces and other allied troops operating on the Murmansk front found the Artie mosquitoes worse foes that the bolsheviki. "After the war is over," one Yank recently said, "we're going to come up here and or ganize an expedition Jo hunt these mosquitoes ' for their ivory. "They're not like ordinary mosquitoes. They buzz up, bite a piece out of your leg and then fly away into the trees and eat it." x STARTING ON THE General Menoher, chief of the air service, bidding farewell tc Coloiu-1 Hartley, pilot of one of the 40 planes which started on a flight from Roose wdt fleld. Miueola, to Toronto, Canada. h lull OEfilZi tiOi & Hi W UULU I Wors mental common sense in English character which keeps fighting, but somehow does not go to tragic ex tremes. England has a way of paus ing just on the brink of what seemed about to be a bloody revolution. It has a national genius for wise com promise. The second thing is that the problem has to do with English workers. Our problem is infinitely complicated in America by the many races and the many languages in volved. We cannot appeal to a com mon tradition expressed in a common speech. The problem is severely trying in England, but it is a problem arising out of the life of a group of people who have lived together .for centuries and who have a mind' without those barriers of race and language whicli are so terribly hard to. surmount. In the third place for all the vigorous language there is a curious appear ance of understanding sympathy under the hostility. When one hears Mr. Clynes speak in the house of commons he marvels at the poise and perspec tive and steadiness of his mind. And there are many such labor leaders. Frank Exchange of Opinion. 'If I remember Mr. Frank Vander- lip has called attention to this in his significant little book, 'What Hap pened in Europe.' One night I went down to Oxford with Sir Arthur Steel-Maitland who was to speak to a number of men and women of the labor group gathered at Balliol for three weeks of study. There wa3 the freest and frankest exchange of opin ion between the group and this dis tinguished member of parliament, who by the way only recently resigned from the ministry. There was dis agreement too. But the thing which impressed me most was a sort of mental approach between Sir Arthur and these men. There was a certain friendly good comradeship which prom ised much. Not long before I left the other side an Englishman said to me with a sort of chuckle, that soon he would have only ten shillings out of each pound of his income. He add ed that in the present situation it was quite right and he had not a word of criticism or complaint." When the question of prohibition was raised Dr. Hough had this to say : "To the typical Englishmen pro hibition on a national scale is simply incomprehensible. He believes that it would not work In England, and that it will not work in America. There is, however, a serious and growing body of public opinion which is in clined to take the prohibition move ment in an earnest and open minded way. And there are Englishmen who do not like it who admit its power. Not long before I sailed, for instance, I was at a luncheon where the sub ject was discussed. Most of the guests were illustrating their oppo sition to prohibition while the discus sion went on. Sir well, I think I will not mention his name, but he is an Englishman of real significance was sitting on my left, arl he said: 'I do not believe in prohibition. I be lieve it is an invasion of personal rights. But I believe we Englishmen must do the drinking we are going" to do in the next four or five years. The economic pressure is going to drive us to it V " Dr. Hough spoke in the most hearty way of his own reception in Great Britain both by the press and the people. He declared that it was very clear to him that the most priceless things in the future of civilization are bound up in a friendly under standing between Great Britain and America. RACE TO TORONTO 10 tr i BELGIAN GIRL IS HEROINE By rev. george guille WMffr'J' M Extension Department. Moody Biblo ) WkJla fc-LJvf j 1 jjj Institute. Chicago ySljL Mile. Marie Louise Gombier, a twenty-one-year-old Belgian girl, who ar rived in New York from France en route to Los Angeles to make her home. In 1914 Mile. Gombier was liv ing in a convent at Bresges, Belgium. When the Germans arrived the girl es caped and made her way to her fa ther's home near Brussels. With the fall of the Belgian capital the Ger mans occupied the Gombier home and installed a wireless plant. Mile. Marie tried to destroy the plant, was caught and sentenced to death. The sentence was later commuted to imprisonment. After five weeks in prison the girl es caped and made her way to the Cana dian lines near Ypres. Here she served as a nurse, winning the Croix de Guerre with two palms for bravery. Mile. Gombier will make her home in Los Angeles with Mrs. L. Dowdy, an American Red Cross nurse she met in France. IN JAIL 14 MONTHS, INNOCENT Italian, Confused In Trial, Was Con victed of Perjury Pardon Recommended. New York. Gov. Smith has grant ed a commutation of sentence to Frank Rossamongo, a Sing Sing pris oner who figured in a famous case Prosecuting authorities in the Bronx who convicted Rossamongo recom mended that he be pardoned, after newly discovered evidence cleared him of wrongdoing. uossamongo nas Deen imprisoneu fourteen months. Nathan Lub.n, "K:ng of Pickpockets," was tried in thp Bronx, rimrired with robbinir ' " Ilnssnmnnfn On the stand Rnssn- mongo made contradictory state ments. Lubin was given ten to twenty years. Rossamongo was tried and con victed of perjury in June, 1918. He always stoutly maintained he was in nocent He got his story to the attention of the governor. District Attorney Francis Martin ordered an investiga tion. It developed that while Rossa mongo on the witness stand seemed to have veered around from prosecuting Lubin to defending him, he was in realitv only confused. " VIRTUE IS REWARDED HERE Nine-Dollar Errand Boy Returns $575,- 000 Lost Bonds Receives $15 as a Reward. New York. That he found $575,000 in Liberty bonds and received a reward of .$15 for turning them into their own ers was the story told by Isadore Gel- ler, a sixteen-year-old errand boy who is employed at $9 a week by Unz & Co., of 2G Broadway. He lives at 420 Junius street. Brooklyn. Geller said that he found a package in front of the subtreasury building that proved to contain more than half a million dollars in bonds. He took it to the offices of Salomon Bros. & Hutzler, brokers of 27 Pine street. ho,se name was on the wrapper. Members of that firm declined to dis cuss the story. Second Indian Skeleton. Towauda, Pa. Paul Scott who v.und the skeleton of an Indian in the road in front of his home at Ul ;ter a few days ago, has unearthed another and larger one near the same spot. The land about the Scott farm abounds in Indian lore and many clay pipes, stone dishes and arrow heart' have been found. TEXT. It is finished. John 19:30. "From the cross uplifted high, Where the Saviour deigTis to die. What melodious sounds I hear Bursting on my ravished ear." "It is finished" is the triumphant cry that forever closed the mighty transaction of the cross. Finished according to all that had been written of him. Finished accord ing to all the types and shad ows of the law. I. What was fin ished? Hear his first recorded ut terance : "Wist ye not that I must be about my Fa- ther's business?" Mv Father's busl- ness" began when sin began and God made proclamation of a coming Seed of the woman, then, in holy symbol ism, set forth the death of that Seed and its. blessed results for believers by taking the skins of animals to make garments for Adam and Eve. Now the work is done, and his mur derers are casting lots for his seam less robe that robe of righteousness that not alone covers the shame of our moral nakedness but becomes an adornment for the holy eye of God. He who hangs upon that cross, in shame and nakedness, to provide this garment for his foes has forever set tied the question of sin so that it can never be opened again between God and the feeblest believer on his Son. "There is therefore now no judgment to them who are in Christ Jesus," for they have been judged once for all in the Person of Another who, to its awful dregs, has drained the cup of divine wrath against sin "It is finished !" Oh soul, think not that anything can be added. If you could live a thousand years in sin less perfection and in unswerving de votion to God and his service, it would add not one whit to what Jesus Christ did for you. The mere thought of do ing so would be robbery; stealing the glory that belongs to him alone. The work is done, and the gospel is the proclamation of that finished work in nvix u m.iint, himself. He is not asking you to do something, but to accept what has been done for you. These two little words, "do" and "done," express the wide divergence between all the world's religion and our holy Christianity. Man's religion insists upon doing and sends its ad herents to the treadmill of their own fleshly activities. Christianity is God's glad tidings to lost men of what is done, once and forever. This fin- ished work is the sure foundation of the soul's enduring peace. There ia no other. II. That finished work was a divine accomplishment. On the mount of transfiguration Moses and Elijah spake with Jesus "of his decease which he should accomplish at Jerusalem." The death of God's Son was not that of a martyr nor that of a hero. It was uie ueam ui uue wim, uum6 sin, was "made sin tor us, tnat we might be made the righteousness of God to him" (II Cor. 5:21). I . It was unnatural. JJying men, spent with agony and blood-shedding, do not cry with a loud voice, as he did. Nor had death the slightest claim, upon him, for he was holy. It was supernatural. Hath he not said, "I lay down my life for the sheep ... no man taketh it from me. but I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This com mandment have I received of my Fa ther." And, having uttered the con- quering cry of the text, he "yielded P the ghost," literally, he "dismissed I -. - ..... his spirit. Tt wn5 nrptprnntnrnl. for he is "the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world." III. The finished work is divinely attested. 1. Witness the rent veil. "The ve'l of the temple was rent in twain." The veil concealed tne nonest wnere tne .presence of God was manifest in the cloud of glory, .ana barred all ap proach thereto, save by the high priest, but by him only once a year and with solemn rites of expiation. Now God rends it in testimony to his acceptance of the work of his Son. The way into his presence is opened at last, so that the vilest of earth may draw nigh along the blood- sprinkled way, and he is himself at liberty to come forth in grace to men. 2. Witness the rent rocks. "The earth did quake and the rocks rent." 3. Witness the rent graves. "The graves were opened, and many bodies of the saints which slept arose.' And thus God did show the power of Christ's death over death. Going into it he robbed it of its power and holds now in his own hand its keys. "The sting of death is sin," but "he hath made him to be sin for us" and he has taken away that sting forever. Poor sinner, God is resting now in the finished work cf his Son, and you may rest there, too, if you will. Baby Sleeps at Night when the stomach works naturally and bowels move freely. Mrs. Winslow's Syr up is especially recommended for quick ly overcoming wind colic, diarrhoea, constipation, flatulency, and other dis orders. Help baby's digestion by giving MRS. WINSLOW'S SYRUP TL lafants' aaa CkiMrea's Reralater and note the health-building sleep that follows. Nothing better for teething time. This remedy contains no opiates, narcotics, alcohol or any harmful in gredients. The formula is on every bottle of this safe, vegetable regulator. At all drag gitt Too Loud. Hewitt This is a pretty dead place. Jewitt I should say so; a still alai would be considered a violation of the ordinance against undue noises. "CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP" IS CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Remove poisons from stomach, liver and bowels. Accept "California" Syrup of Figs only look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harm less laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each bot tle. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say "California." Adv. Thinking of the Milliner's Bill. -jna Sr U3IJ1SO tin 113 II A Ulljr Art nriseri he hides his henrf in Hip snnd. De Grouch I wish he'd everlasting ly hide his tall feathers there. You Do More Work, You are more ambitious and you get mora enjoyment out of everything when your blood is in good condition. Impurities in the blood have a very depressing effect on the system, causing weakness, laziness. nervousness and sickness. GROVE'S TASTELESS Chll! TONIC restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Ranching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. UKUVfc'S TASTELESS thill TONIC i YrSr? ' i"W 2-- vV blood needs Ouiaine to Purifvit and IRON to Enrich it. These reliable tonic proD- erties never fail to drive out impurities in tne Diooa 1 rw o....v r n nonrr ii JucuKui-weuuuRruwcr oi wuvtij TASTELESS Chill TONIC has made It the favorite tonic in thousands of homes. More than thirty-five years ago, folks would ride a long distance to get GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC when member of their family had Malaria or needed a Dody-buuding. strength-giving "" lulUiUia jus mo suic w day, and you can get it from any drug store. 60c per bottle. Makes 9 Out of 10 opls Sufe Doctors declare that more than 70 non organic diseases can be traced to Acia Stomach. Starting with Indigestion, heart burn, belching, food-repeating, bloat, sour, gassy stomach, the entire system eventually becomes anected. every vital organ lunfnni in some degree or other. You see these vic tims of Acid-Stomach everywhere peopl aomnu. bii who are subject to nervousness, neauacne. insomnia, biliousness people who suffer from rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica and aches and pains all over the body. It Is safe to say th?t about 9 people out of 10 suffer to some) e-tent from Acid-Stomach. If you suffer from stomach trouble or, even if you do not feel any stomach distress, yet are weak and ailing, feel tired and dragged out. lack "pep" and enthusiasm and know that something is wrong although you cannot locate the exact cause of your trou ble you naturally want to get back your grip on health as quickly as possible. Then take EATONIC, the wonderful modern rem edy that brings quick relief from pains of Indigestion, belching, gassy bloat, etc. Keen your stomach strong, clean and sweet. Se how your general health improves Yiow quickly the old-time vim, vigor and vitality comes back! Get a big 60c box of EATONIC from your druggist today. It Is guaranteed to pleas you. If you are not satisfied your druggist will refund your money. ATONflC V w v ( FOR YOUR ACP-STOMAClO Gear Your Skin WithCuticura All druggists: Soap 25.1 Ointment 25 & 50. Tal cum 25. Sample each free of "Cuticnra, IS II -1 Dept. Bottom." 1 i'l I! r, : i'l 1 i I i 1 i U 1 i