Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, August 20, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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rARROT.M'ON CHRONICLE
CALOMEL DANGER 75/6e LibeHyB
TOLD BY DODSON <5Half U UinA Ag
Cannot Gripe, Sicken, or Salivate Yourself if jt * •
Say? You Cannot Gripe, Sicken, or Salivate Yourself if
You Take “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Instead
CtekauH lour* jim a day! You know
wbal rati*ud is. If* memu-y ; qulck-
ail««T I'nii.iud is ilnrtgc ntiiH. It
«tbmIh» iau< w.ur lotf like dynamite,
rraiiijwut >u/1 Wrlcning you. Calomel
attack* ibe U«t« and sbeutil ni-ier l»e
pot lulii year *r«tno
When you fed bilious. alii£glsh.
cotiM4 imfHl aits' all knocked om „nd
twtlei 4* you mef a ikw of ilniigernus
c»tout remrintHT that your drug-
rV( srfts for a fear rent* a large tint-
fla 4>f IssKoa's liter Tone, which la
enileely vegetable and pleasant to
tnke nnij la u |>erfert aubatltutn for
calomel. It la guaranteed to start your
liver without atlrrlng y-ui up Ittaltle.
and ran not Midvale.
Iton't take calomel! It nm not he
iriinieii nny more limn h leopard or
ii wild cut. Taka D»dKon'a l.lver Tone,
wlih’h straightens you right up anil
inak»«a you feel llnr. tllve It to the
I'lilldren because it Is perfaetly h it rue
le«a and iloean't itrlpe.—Ailv.
am.
.
John Dickinson
Jhermen^
Harmless, purely vegdtble
eat cfciUraa •
rasslusr, kiMk aa
THeaa It* Heart—It’a Happy Now”
because its healthy stomach digests food
properly, and bowels act aa they should,
I mrs! wins low’s
1 SYRUP
The Infants’ and Children’s Regulator
ft is a real r.lrnaurc to rive this tnvnlnnblr prep-
anlimi and liahiea anil young children like to
take it Mrs. Winslow's Syrup never (ails to over-
come consti;ration amt brina-s remarkably quirk
■ml gratifying relief In wind relic. diarihoea.
ttiitnleucy and the many tiler similar troubles.
Ibid n lew drops ile|« iuling on age. to esch (eed-
tng. it keeps baby s bowels regular.
It I* the best remedy that medical skill has
ever devised and endorsed for teething babies, as
may be quickly proven by rending the complete
below which appears on every label.
CJMAaiw fig-,
Sifii Sjm
At All Druggimtm
AJ9GL0-AMERICAN DRUG CO.. 215-217 FdUa St. N.w T«k
45— s*Wo,TuLH„ToLd r- ^
Star Citrate
RLuLxrt Sodium bicarbonate
HUBT IS KJLY BIRTHSTONE
Q**" H*« Been Associated Through the
Ceti tones With Some Remarkably
Queint Superstition a.
The ruby la the blrthKtone nf July.
*» wwe saww-lafed tn nnrteni I lines with
mum oncer superstitions. How these
old fancies erlglnnfed nr how they
ewuld here Ime pntiwvl off «n the puli.
Mr ft is ilitn<-u)t to tmntrine The fni't
*hn» the cnmnvwi people hml Implicit
falfh Sn them pmivs how very niqi'li
nitaw {1- bilnna the world once was
then It ts today.
*’•*' 'wfleoce. the anefenfa believed
that ff a ruby were worn nbont the
onrk It mnfeiTtd the power of mwlnir
•ntttcdhrk One wonders whnt mono-
mrnfs/ fslw gtwrted this absurd cou-
»wft end for whet pm-pooc If w as g,.n
emliy Mfrvnl. bowerer, possibly ho-
earner rubles were ratify nrcl the com-
awn pevup'e mold not teat the matter
for Themselves.
The ruby el sn wn *nppo*«rt to he n
teftunurn against eril spirits. the
|dneor end pulwsi. By fhc deepening
of if» color ft forewarned Its wenrer
WCTlnst impend'ng misfortune |f tied
wpott the forehead to a linen efoth It j
sew« believed to he a operffir for dig
wrap of the eye. -Brooklyn Knglr I
•ome Frame Thsnrv
“Mey 1 auk wbsl ttml sernp of t>n|>er
fc TOO are g»zjnc at la mrrh mi-luu-
«dtaly rudkiuur
“Tuo may. That's a dlptiyum from
Ihe arheol of expertem-e.-
“A whuir
"* rwweeted note I’ve jowl pN|(| f„r
auMher man wba rene la Iturrlivlly one
dey and fermiaded tap to Indorse It."
SOME RECORD
FLIGHTS
Give Proof That Bird* Are Still the
Undisputed Championa In the
Flying Game.
Lonir-iliafanre flights hy hlnlmen
hnvc long been nnridpnted liv the birds
llietnsclves. siiys (lie Christian Science
Monitor Recent proof* of their endttr-
sure and wanderlust comes In s re-
port from Capetown, which s«ys that
fl'e swallows have been traced recent-
ly from hangars In Knglnnd to tem-
porary homes In South Africa. These
birds were ringed as nestlings and
found hy u hupp) chance at Ihe other
eijtl of the world. One nestling rlmreii
In La lien shire, was found In Cape
Province In I'Vhrusry of the next year:
another, ringed In Ayrshire, waa re-
isirtcd next March In Orange Fre.
Slate: another, ringed |n Yorkshire
was recovered In Must Orlquiiliiml the
following February; n fourth swallow
this time ari adult, ringed in Slafforti
shire, was recovered in Natal 1»
months afterward: the fifth bird,
ringed on June 1. 1010 In Stirlingshire,
was found In February, |(K!0. at I.ake
Chrlssle,
The ringing Kcheine w as Itinugurateil
by J, H. Whltherhy, eilllor of Itritlsb
Hlrds.
DEPENDED DPON
IT 20 YEMS
Lydia E. Pinkham't Vege-
table Compound Has Been
This Woman’s Safeguard
All That Time.
Omaha. Neb.—‘‘I have used Lydia EL
Pink ham aVegetableCompound forover
.....twenty years for fe-
male troubles and it
has helped me very
much. I have also
uaed Lydia G. Pink-
ham's Sanative
Wash with good re-
sults. I always have
a bottle of Vegetaoie
Compound in tb«
house as it iu a good
remedy in time of
need. You can
———__ publish my t e a t i-
monial as every statement I havo
made is perfectly true.’’—Mrs. J. 0.
Elmijuibt, i!424 S. 20th Street, Omaha.
Nebraska.
Women who suffer from those dis-
tressing ills peculiar to their sex should
be convinced by the many genuine and
truthful testimonials we are constantly
publishing in the newspapers of the
ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound to restore their health.
To know whether Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound will help you, try
it! For advice write to Lydia E. Pink-
ham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn,
Mass. Your letter will be opened, read
and answered by a woman, and held in
Strict confidence.
Tan-NoMore
Skin Seautifiar?
gk'.&JumiJtuxlJarv
Thanatopsia.
The word i* „f (|r,vk derlvHlioii
ami mean* “view of ilcatli." A* use«t
In Ilryant's |«aan It might he luli.r-
preted aa a meditation ou the sule
J"ct of death.
T wo Iii'hiIm of a family are mu iiim-ivo
earlly better Ilian 4ine
Twenty Five Years
of Success
proves that
the originator of
Postum Cereal
was building upon a sure foundation
when he devised this most famous
of ail cereal beverages.
Where one used it in place of coffee,
in the beginning, tens of thousands
drink it today—and prefer it to coffee.
Healthful, delightful to taste and
satisfying to every one at table.
Postum Ls now recognized as coffee's
one and only great competitor among
thoae who delight in a coffee-like
flavor.
Sold everywhere by Grocers
Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc.
Battle Creek, Michigan
IMS Liberty null—«bal!
it ring again to “Pro-
claim Liberty through-
<mt all the land unto
Hl1 the iirtiuhilHiita
thereof”?
The Liberty Bell, pos-
sibly moat revered of
nil American hlMtorlcu!
______relics, has been mute
for nearly a century.
!o the thousand* of the present gen-
eration who have seen It In Independ-
ence hall and on the various trips
about the country It has been no less
glorloun because mute. Do the Amer-
ican people want Its brazen voice re-
stored?
For rmalern American science says,
the Liberty Bell may be made to ring
again as Joyously as of old
What a history has the Liberty
Bell! No wonder It fa revered.
Indepemtence ball was hullt as the
state house of the Pennsylvania coin,
nlu! government. It was finished In
1734 snd cost $28,000—regarded at
the time as nn extravagant sum to put
Into a public building. The hell for
Its belfry was Imported from Eng-
land. It was cast In I7o2. On Its
trial ringing It cracked. It whs re-
cast In 1753 b.v Pass A Stow of Phil-
adelphia. Isaac Norris, Esq., speak-
er of the Pennsylvania assembly, had
charge of the recasting, anil It was
at his suggestion that the words of
Holy Writ were cast upon fillets
around Its crown—words so strangely
prophetic of the great day to come 23
year* later
The old bell rang first to call the
members of the assembly; It rsng
when town meetings wen* held In the
state house yard; It tolled dismally
when tiie sf.'iup act went Info eflfect;
It electrified >he fieople when the fen
ship Polly wbj sent home with Its
targo untouched. It saluted the pntrl-
ots from Boston whe.; they sojourned
with ihe patriots or Pb.lndelphla: it
sounded dirge fashion when Bosttm
was occupied by the redcoats under
Onge; It pealed Joyously 'when Ihe
news of Islington and Concord
reached ihe Quaker Cltv. and finally,
It clanged forth as spokesman an-
nouncing the hlrlh of the new repub-
lic and the t nnsuinmatlnu of the Dec-
laration of Independenct*.
For a lime it rested on the bot-
tom 4if the Delaware river, that Ihe
British should not find It. F4ir many
- always -
i between you
i<md the Sun.
rig Run or nitiuir-
>M wind, li brineh
w -- the ftkln th« vel-
e^rrtj Boft riPAS of rootb.
^ IJfteMi before enlnii oat
JO tbfi evening. It imaarea
• r*ultleaa complexion.
7—r M, O iH-4«i?s!^,' rlT
mker Laboratoruti, riemphiAltea
The sav-
It la D. H. Wilson, the New York
engineer, who proposes the surgical
operation. You don’t recall Wlls<jn?
He I* the man who fitted up anew the
<lamage<l German merchant marine,
Remember, when the United State*
I brew down the gauntlet to Oermnny
In April three years ago how tlie Huns
retaliated hy putting out of cotnmls-
shm nearly every German men hunt
liner tied up st American wharves?
Axi*s were swung, explosives were
used, and Intricate machinery with
which these «hlps were propelled was
"bashed In." In the belief that the
Ysnks never would he able to repair
these ships 'n time to turn them
against the fatherland. Looking over
Ihe "wrecks,- some engineer* said It
would take a year or more to repair
these ships and put them bnrk In com-
mission. New parts would have to be
Installed.
Then along came Wilson with hla
electric-welding needle. It Is a mat-
ter of history, of course, that In from
three to four months every single Ger-
man liner was ready to put to sea
again. Even while Yankee troopa
were wiping out the St. Mlhlel salient
and sweeping dean the Arg4>nne,
these German ships, led hy the giant
Vaterland, were pouring AtmTh'an
men and munitions Info England,
France and Belgium. Not only did
Wilson ami Ida crew weld the Vater-
land and her sister ships us good aa
new, hut he made them so fleet that
4>ur gobs were able to get Hire** knots
years after Hie Revolution It Joyously _ ..... ... .............
immitineed the coining of Illustrious j better speed out of them than tlie Gcr-
vlsltors. and It tolled In mourning for | mans ever hail made.
(he >1eaihs of A inertcan patriots. It j 8o fur has electrical welding pro-
rang Its last In IK35 when lolling for j gresseil that the ship of Ihe future will
the funeral of John Marshall, chief j h« entirely eli*4'trle welded, m-cordlng
ftutlee of file Unltivl Hlntes, for then j to designs and plans worked* out hy
It cracked. j ri>sear4'h <*nglueera. No rivets, no
Kie4*trt<'hl 4 nglni*»r* Interested In sngle Inins, and a saving In <uist of
(he proposition of wditlng would piece j eonalructhui and material, nra among
tbe sB4-re4l 4>h| hell together F.le4'trh' | the claims of Its designers.
Ify, fh'* magic power 4if modern Indus-
trialism would be Ihe medium applied
not alone lo (dose the breach la ihe
bell, hut to cure It of l*s chnmlc meial-
lurgb'sl disease slow* d'alntegratlon—
by applying tlu> latest developments
In ihe therapeutics 4tf mineral matters,
■ilV* Charles W Duke In tin; Philadel-
phia I’lihllc Lelger
Primitive Traveling
The “esiauclero," or ranchman, of
Argentina, Is well *tif!«flc<l with the
heavy native “cliata.” a carl with two
Mg wheels, much like ilia bullock carls
of Asia, uml to uirel s “iliaia," with
20 lioraes drew log Its load of grain lu
the railway. Is a picturesque Incident
of country Journeying. Horse* are
cheap and plentiful; (lie “peon’’ who
drives them lives on Ihe ranch. Ills
aervlces cost little, and the two-
Wheeled - luUss* when It stick* In
| The hull I* electric welded throiigli-
j mil, and therefore wholly without rlr*
j i*ts In It* construction All plates are
J abutted without lapping straps or
I angle*, amt 'hen are weldi d with a
I Joint w hich the engineers I'lalin will
lie 115 per rent of 100 per cent as strong
as the steel members themselves. This
eliminate* hII overlapping steel In plat-
the mud, Is reasonably easy to extri-
cate hy tliming if round before pull.
Ing It out. Tlie procees scoops the
mud and makes a roughly circular hole
In the rued something like Ihe crater
of a very small volcano, but the
“chat*" la cm, Mnd im it* way again.
Accounting for tbs Few.
"No one 1s all bad.”
“I'oaslhly not. But some people have
a preponderance of badness sufficient
to keep them In Jail a good part of the
time.'*
Ing, angle Irons or rivets. ___
Ing of steel from this elimination
,one ship of 3.000 tons, according to
the designers, amounts to about 500
Ions.
Not only Wilson, hut "Wake-Vm-Up"
Dudley of the Chester Shipbuilding
company; B. B. Chichester, the Vir-
ginian who developed the science of
electric welding under water, and
other atithorltlea on w-eldlng say the
grand old Liberty Bell can be re-
deemed; that It may have “health
glands” transferred to Ife body that
will do for It what the “Fountain of
Florida” was supposed to do for de-
crepit Ponce de Leon. Transfusion
would he the process Involved, Just
ns In the hospital nn anemic la wooed
back to life and color again hy the In-
Jecrlon of pure, fresh blood Into hla
veins; onlv in fhl* case It would be a
metnl transfusion.
To heal (he crack they would pro.
reed In this fash'on: Tnke flrat a grain
of metnl from the crevice of the hell.
Have It analyzed by a hoard of ex-
pert metallurgist*. Reproduce In the
laboratories of the alchemist the Iden-
tical metal nf which the Liberty Bell
Is composed. When you have the prop-
er alloy you are ready to bring on the
electric needle.
Now for the procees of welding.
Fashion the new metal to he applied
Into a wire or needle of the welding
apparatus. Measure the resistance
of the bell and the resistance of the
wire after having estimated the
amount sufficient to fill tip the crack.
Now to till In the crack. One elec-
tric contact Is made on the hell and
the other on the needle that Is com-
posed of the *ame metal substance a*
the hell Itself. Electrlqjty leu|M be-
tween the two point*. The electric
needle Is .-onsumlng Itself and depos-
iting Its own particles within the ori-
fice of the split hell.
You slrnply touch the electric needle
to one or the other aide of the crack
withdraw It « fraction of nn Inch, and
Ihen repeat the [iroiess over and over
Particle hy particle, layer on layer,'
the process continues until the opening
Is closeil.
ThirtyRuDningSores
Hemembor, I stand back of avery box
11 (or old loros,
I had 20 running lore § on mv lea for
DON’T
DESPAIR
If you are troubled with pains or
achea; feel tired; have headache,
indigestion, insomnia; painful paas-
°f urine, you will find relief ha
COLD MEDAL
^ narcHna^C
R.'s^’^’atega
8£Wstsa~fi-K
— Msdsl — snrr to.
Is closed.
Not only will It ring, say the weld-
ers, hut It will have again the same vt.
brunf tone that It had when It was
first hung up In the steeple of the
Stale house In I’hllmleiphlu In (he sum*
mer of 1753.
Stonewall Jackson’s Will.
While a hoy "81 one wall" Jackson
determined that he would master every
weak lies* that he had. moral, mental
and physical. To i,BrqHn hlmaelf to
• he weather he went wllhmil an over
coat. On account of dyspepsia he lived
on stale bread and drank buttermilk
and wore a wel shirt next to his body.
He made It a rule to go to bed at 0
o'chs'k. and he went on the stroke
Of the clock. It Is no wonder that hi
was called Rtonewntl.—R, L. Kmltli.
“Tragi* Century "
The sixteenth i-enlury Is called the
“tragic century" on account <»r the
great number of deaths occurring In
If. The whole world was swept hy
plagues throughout ths hundred yearn.
I’estHence nearly depopulated China,
and raged throughout Germany, Hoi*
land, Italy, Mpaln, England, France
and Russia, Tlie ‘Wealing sickness "
which broke out In Knglsnd In IflOff,
caused the death of nearly one-half
the population of tho largs dries of
that eonotry. Tho century waa also
for Itfl many w
KING PIN
CHEWING TOBACCO
Has that good
licorice taste
uouVeieen
looking for.
innxTfoHiil:
HIDES
rOB TOP MARKET PRICEI
i&ir
ASSrsss "ItssoFti—t r- fsr Vs-ttaucss
icE»r
TC#’ I
"css |
Cuticura Talcum
i* Fragrant and
Very Healthful
»stp IU, Otatawst » sad Ms, T«l*«, a*.
FRECKLES HEMS©
W* N- U. 0AU.AX NO. M.1MML
1
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Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, August 20, 1920, newspaper, August 20, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth556253/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.