PAGE FOUR
gpHfb* Concord Daily Tribune
| J. B. SHERRILL
t* ■ Editor and Publisher
if W. M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor
if 7“ MEMBER OF THE
it: ‘ ASSOCIATED PRESS
|S g The Associated Press ia exclusirely
fejj entitled to the use for repubiication of
’# HI news credited to it or not otherwise
f credited in this paper and also the lo
■ | cal news published herein.
HP AH rights of republication of spec
i f lal dispatches herein are also reserved.
Special Representative
5 ; FROST, LANDIS A KOHN
226 Fifth Avenue, New York
i I Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago
q ! 1004 Csndler Building, Atlanta
ill ▼ ' . " CTJ SIC-. -
Entered as second class mail matter
i at the postoffice at Concord, N. C., un
;: der the Act of March 3, 1878.
| j ““ SUBSCRIPTION RATES
; : In the City of Concord by Carrier:
5 : One Year |6.00
1: Six Months 3.00
B ! Three Months 1.50
- ; One Month . .50
; : Outside of the Sta ti the. Subscription
Is the Same as in the City
Out of the city and by mail in North
| j Carolina the following prices will pre-
1 1 nil:
|! One Year ?5.00
| j Six Months 2.50
Three Months 1.25
f j Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a
Month
f All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in
Advance
RAILROAD SCHEDULE
In Effect Jan. 30, 1926.
Northbound
b i No. 40 To New York 9:28 P. M.
t 1 No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M.
No. 36 To New York 10 :25 A. M.
No; 34 To New York 4 :43 P. M.
No. 46 To Danville 3 :15 P. M.
No. 12 To Richmond 7 :10 P. M.
; No. 32 To New York 9 :03 P. M.
No. SO To New York 1:55 A. M.
Southbound
,No. 46 To Charlotte 3 :45 P. M
No. 36 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M.
No. 28 To Birmingham 2 :85 A. M
No 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M
; No. 33 To New Orleans 8 :15 A. M.
i No. 11 To Charlotte 8 :G0 A. M
i No. 135 To Atlanta 8 :37 P. M
No. 39 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M
No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M.
Train No. 34 will stop in Concord
; to take on passengers going to Wash
« Ington and beyond. aw
■ Train No. 37 will stop here to dis
t ; ehargepassengere coming from be-
L 1 yond Washington,
r All trains stop in Concord except
; No. 38 northbound.
I fjLBIBLE THOUGHT lil
I —FOR' TODAY—I
Ml T*wptf** memorized, will prove • ji|
priceless heritage in after year* |B|
For the kingdom of God is not meat
** ®od drink: but righteousness and
•** peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.—
Romans 14.17.
THE REAL CAUSE OF Ol R
PROGRESS.
The people are the real cause of the
Q progress of North Carolina.
S Natural advantages and wise lead
ership have played their part, and a
big one. to be sure, but just the same
, it has been the character of the OP pci
cent. American citizenship that has
given North Carol na the leadership
over Southern States and a place near
the lead in comparison with or her
States.
Robert TV. Winston, wrvng In
-V These United States says wisely that
4* ‘‘North Carolina’s development is the
ft triumph of a vigorous middle class.
The State never had the aristocratic
5 traditions of either Virginia or
Jj* South Carolina. ** * The lesser gap
J; between high and low in North Car-
olina in ante-bellum days has been re
flected in a greater readiness to wel
come new ideas, a lack of reverence
■fe for old allegianc*e and preconceptions.
True, the dead hand of the past seem
/ to have us firm a grip here as
m elsewhere in the first quarter of a
X; century after Appamattox. but more
f recent events have proved that this
was not so. ♦ * ♦
.Jfc “While South Carolina and Georgia
<* have been worshipping at the altars
;* of such gods as Blease and Tom Wat-
JC son, North Carolina lias been heeding
J the qdvice of Aycock. Mclver, Alder-
V manAand others with a passion for
> KSuoc racy and democratic edu
-pJltion.”
In other words North Carolinians
recognized every one who prov
.. ed worthy as "F. K. V.'s" We have
• worked on a common level, without
® tradition and sentiment wliieli gave
..t- reeognition only to those persons who
were horn on certain family trees. It
•» 'ls the "vigorous middle class." to be
ffi sure, that has made North Carolina.
.'.{K along with - thejr determination not to
E centralize population in large cities.
tv ANOTHER DRY SUMMER?
Already scarcity of water is prov
i s: lug a menace to farmers in sections of
m“: North and South Carolina and Flor
. ida. Crops are growing slowly and
those that are growing seem ]Hirelnsl
and withered.
(Sy- After the drought of last summer
fe , the public seemed to tuke for granted!
that there would be plenty of rain I
rat* this year. There was u<> reason for!
SjifS this-bclief except that a« a rule there j
are never two concurrent dry seasons. I
S But if there is not au abundance of
rain in the ueur future the dry spell
jSj of last year will be as uothing corn
jg; pared to this year’s drought.
K Despite the rains anti snows of the
■K wipley.fi stpaius, springs and walls
gS neWi; folly reached juumtalcy before
this spring's cby spell -started. ft is
g a fact that wells in this county arc
ip| already Nlow’ug up in their supplies'
jo*- and several farmers within the j*ast!
several weeks have found it necessary
H! /to deepen their wells in order tq |et
ra!? the necessary suply of water.
-’"That condition exists in Cabarrus
g county today, and we are told that
. more rain has fallen here than in
some other counties in this State,
South Carolina and Georgia,
f Concord will have its new impound
ing dam completed about August
first. Unless conditions change
J greatly this additional water supply
, will be gladly welcomed.
„ DR. POTEAT TO RETIRE.
L
- There is a strong feeling at Wake
Forest that Dr. William Louis IV
teat will retire in October as presi
dent of Wake Forest College. This
does not mean that he is to sever
■ all connections with the college. It
_ means rather that he will become
president emeritus after serving 20
■ years as head of the institution.
Some months ago I)r. Poteat let it
: be known that he wanted to give up
) the active presidency of'-the iustitu
* tion when he becomes 70 years of age.
j He will reach that age in October
l and unless more attacks are made on
him it is likely that he will then re
-1 side.
Dr. Poteat is not going to retire
| under tire and we admire this deter-
I minatiou. He would have quit some
1 time ago perhaps, had not an effort
1 been made to put him out because of
bis views on evolution. When talk
of putting him out was started, the
venerable president just started to
tight. He will never be put out.
and those persons who wish to see
another man at the active head of
the institution may as well accept this
fact. They can get rid of him. may
be. by letting him alone but so long
as they want to tight he is willing to
wage his part of the conflict.
Sherrill's New House.
Lexington l.ispateh.
John B. Sherrill, editor and pub
lisher of the Concord Tribune and
Times. *uas given his newspaper plant
a new and modern home in keeping
with the modern type of papers issu
ing therefrom. Mr. Sherrill is a
credit to the newspaper profession
in North Carolina and his long ser
vice as secretary of the North Caro-"
liiut Press Association was a testi
monial; of the high regard in which
ail the brtbeen of die press hold him.
He'is not now secretary because he
insisted on being given n rest,. And
the splendid local daily and the fine
semi-weekly county paper he edits
are both very worthy of the city of
Concord and the county of Cabarrus.
His son. tV. M. Sherrill, is associated
now'ivith his father in operating these
papers and lie is likewise a very cap
able newspaper man. A newspaper
is an evidence both of the character
of the man or men who run it and
the town or city in which it is pub
lished. Hence both Concord and Mr.
Sherrill are deserving of congratula
tion on the progress of the papers
as marked by the provision of a bet
ter plant.
Extends Congratulations.
Morgaiiton News-Herald.
The XeWs-Herahl extends congrat
ulations and best wishes to the Con
cord Times and Tribune upon their
removal into a spacious new building.
Mr. ,7. B. Sherrill, who has owned
and edited t*ae Concord papers for
more than forty years, is known and
admired throughout North Carolina
as one of the best newspaper men in
the state and it is gratifying to his
friends to see evidences of progress
and prosperity in his business, as are
shown in this new and modern news
paper home.
Bro. Johnson Rejoices With Us.
Charity and Children.
The Concord Tribune and Times,
under the able management of Mr.
John 11. Sherrill, is housed in one of
the iiiosi complete and ■ modern homes
in the slate, \\> rejoice in our friend
Sherrill s success. He is worthy of
all the good that can come to him
for he is one of file finest fellows in
the business.
The Amazon river is estimated to
be 670 feet deep at a point 1,000
miles from the sea.
Passes Mark
iff;;
■aBSiS
' vim flv-iqf Fim teojp
lim owu world’s gecord for 3,0ti0 me-
O'P by making the d’stpUlW fa dtfkt
. minutes ana tueuty-five seconds on a
Berlin track.
t PUN TO INCREASE THRIFT
' i IN U. S. SCHOOLS
By & W. STRAUS,
President American Society for
Thrift.
rP la of special Interest and Im
portance to note that a national
conference of educators has been
balled to meet In Philadelphia this
stunner for the purpose of further
ins the thrift educational movement'
In this country.
Reports will be submitted on the
progress that has been made in the
work of teaching thrift in the
Schools, and plans will be developed
tar still further developing this
great movement.
5. W. STRAUS
It Is appropriate that the con
ference will be held in Philadelphia
—a city so closely affiliated with
the career of America's great thrift
ipostle. Benjamin Franklin. It ia
appropriate, too, that this confer
ence, coming as It will on June 29,
will be on the eve of the one hun
dred and fiftieth anniversary of tho
birth of our nation. Good thrift is
good patriotism, and any man who
practices it contributes directly to
the upbuilding of his country.
It will be Interesting to learn just
how far the work of teaching thrift
In the schools has progressed. It
was started at the Panama-Pacifio
Exposition in San Francisco in
August, 1915, when the Interna
tional Congress for Thrift sent reso
lutions to the National Education
Association, recommending the ad
visability of teaching thrift in the
schools. Accordingly, the National
Committee on Thrift Education was
appointed as one of the standing
committees of the National Council
of Education.
During the intervening eleven
years, the work has progressed—
somewhat slowly at first, but al.
ways steadily—and now moving
forward with tremendous mo
mentum.
Let the teachings of thrift in our
schools be given every encourage
ment. By doing this we shall be lay
ing a most substantial foundation for
ths future progress of our country.
APPROVAL OK ACTION
OF GOVERNOR McLEAN
Plans For State Institutions Undere
Construction Must Be Submitted to
Insurance Commissioner.
Tribunt Bureau.
Sir Walter Hotel.
Raleigh. June H.— ap
proval of the action of Governor A.
W. Me Lean, as director of the bud
get, in issuing instructions that heads
of all state institutions with build
ings under construction or in con
templation, submit all plans to the
State Insurance Commissioner to
see that they provided for fireproof
construction, is being voiced by
state officials and the general public
alike.
Those in the various state depart
ments see in the memorandum a dis
tinct step forward on the part of the
state, inasmuch as the very nature
of the instructions arc in the direc
tion of permanent construction of all
State buildings, be they department
al or institutional, as fire-proof con
struction and permancy go band in
hand- It is pointed out, too. that
while at first glance jt may appear
that his order will entail additional
expense to the state, it in the long
run will mean real economy, us re
placements will not have to be taken
into consideration that maintainanee
will be cut to a minimum and that
a great saving will result in the low
er fire insurances rates that will re
sult.
In answering several inquires to
day concerning his memorandum,
dealing with fireproof construction
of State buildings. Gov. McLean
said:
“1 have found that iti a number of
eases where buildings have been con
structed in the last few years, com
plaint has ariseu involving the fail
ure to follow the requirements of the
tire laws of the State. I think the
| law- clearly prdvides that conditions
I affecting the matter of lire protec
tiion in these buildings should be
supervised by the State Insurance
Commissioner, and that this can be
! done with less cost and more satio
| faction from every standpoint wnon
(the plans for these buildings are
drawn am! while tile buildings are in
tho course of const ruction.
"My purpose in issuing the
memorandum under discussiou was
to request the heads of institutiom-,
architects and contractors to act
under the supervision of the State
Insurance Commissioner in matters
relating to fire protection and in all
buildings copstructed ill the future,
whether they fall within the type
i usually referred to as tire proof or
semi-fi rep root
"I believe the state should adopt
the fixed policy of requiring all
buildings used ( dormitories or
, hospitals at the cha|itJ*!e and cor
,rectloiial institutions^of' the State,
jto be of fireproof eops.truetion. Build
ings at, the institutions j used s'for
schqol i purposes, the
<4l»r',tbau for dorffiitorjpfi and hos
. be built, of. «ptni-fireproo(
cOnstrutetioii: burni these caseu they
should be ample provision for fire
THE CONtiOkb DAILY tRIBUNfi
[Wo/HOLLYWOOD
4/ V by edward clark'
Copyrighted by Warner Bros. Pictures, Ir.o.
“BROKEN HEARTS OF HOLLYWOOD” with Louise Drcaasr it A
Warner pieturizatlon of thle no*M.
' BYXOPSIB
Travelling alone on the Lot An
geles Limited is Betsy Ann Ter
icilliger, a girl of surpatting
beauty. Hal Chutney, a handsome
young man, boards the train In
lotoa. Seatmates, and mutually at
tracted, each learns that the other
l« on the same mission — bound for
Hollywood, as prize winner of a
newspaper contest, to get a movie
tryout. They have great fun when
Hal shares his “ home-cooked" tvp
oer box with Betsy, who contrib
utet the dessert-candy hearts.
CHAPTER II (Continued)
Back from the diner at this junc
‘ure came a fat male passenger who
lad prolonged his meal hour and
•educed his digestion by the use of
(iqttids other than those on the
iill-of-fare. The Limited strained
around a curve, just when the
bibulous passenger was opposite
Betsy and Hal, and as pediatric
steadiness is not a virtue, of the
condition he was in, the fat pas
senger fell athwart their laps.
Whether or not he skinned his own
shins or bruised their knees mat
tered little; for after he had been
fished by the combined efforts of
Moysius and Hal from the floor
between the seats, thus relieving
the pressure of his elbow from
Betty’s pet corn, and the two young
people sat down calmly again, they i
discovered ff\ tragedy that in the
excitement had gone unnoticed un
til now.
The shock of the man's fall had
iarred the candy hearts from their
hands, and they lay now crumbled
Hal, unchilled, helped Betsy in and
got in himself.
»nd broken on the floor. Betsy
»nd Hal, gazing mournfully upon
them, could not dispel from their
thoughts a feeling—absurd as It
might be, yet tenacious —that this
trivial little mishap was prophetic.
“I hope,” said Betsy, while they
gazed uneasily into each other’s
eyes, “that's no sign of what’s go
ing to happen to us in Holly wood.”
CHAPTER 111
Life itself is a good deal like
S railroad trip; there’s a lot of fuss
and admiration and peeking at the
beginning, but usually little atten
tion at the ending. Many a way
farer whose start was heralded
with congratulations and brass has
reached the finish uncondoled and
unattended in some dark alleyway
of night; and many p. traveller who
set out to tinkling cymbals steps off
uncelebrated at journey's ending,
searching in vain for a friendly,
familiar face In the jostling crowd.
So it was with Betsy and Hal
when they stood at last in Los
Angeles, on the platform of the
Transcontinental’s terminal, which
looked more like an olden Spanish
mission than a modern railroad
I depot.
Approaching Los Angeles their
enthusiasm had welled up to flood
tide. In all the practical worka
day world there is no thrill com
parable to that of Youth’s first
arrival at the threshold of Ambi
tion’s Goal. Yet in the last few
minutes that marked the crawling
of the great overland train into the
station, and Us sighing halt, the j
eager waters of excitement had re-!
ceded and left two throbbing hearts !
stranded high and dry upon grat
ing sands of nervousness. The j
waves of bop* slapped hollowly ini
the furthermost bays of their c0..-|
sciousness as they stood uncertain j
now lu tbe oasis of their own lug
gage on the desert of the station
platform. Quite without lutent,
they were holding hands.
GoDe now the Intimacy of the
Pullman car for which they had
formed a sentimental attachment;
gone tbe recognised faces of travel
mates, and tho comfort of Aloy
tics* monumental grin. All, all
were scattered—tho cosy hours.
"is-lyp't It big?” said Betsy thin-<
iy, involuntarily meaning the cir
cunistanaea as much as the Station.
"if e-yes.” agreed 11*1, staring
around In some disappoint m tat.
- "■ 'fg' ■ -IS 'W'l'-I ■■ 11 1
escapes and other protective meas
ure;. PJau.H for all public buildings
should be submitted by the architects
to the State Insurance- UouiiuisKion
cz fc>r approcypl as-to -tjie fire j pro
tection features before sdy nriqliiuil
ly accepted aiud construction rum
meneed, Governor McLean conclud
ed.
"Thut is what we have been work
ing tof years," said titary W. Wade,
State Insurance Commbsiouer. (n
commenting upon the order and the
'elaboration upon it made by Gov
ernor McLean today. "We feel that
“I—l thought there'd be some om
. from the studio tc meet us. I Jin'!
. think they could have forgoitoa
, what time we were due."
"What’ll we do? Where shall w»
, go?" wanly asked Betsy.
“I think I'd better call up the
. President of the Amalgamated
. Studios,” reflected Hal, aloud; this
! sounded so important that they
. both felt a trifle reassured. But:
"Camping ain’t allowed here!"
, suggested a platform master coldly
. in passing. Whereupon the shado*
of courage faded again. They wcr»
embarrassed to discover that they
had been holding hands all tlili
while. Hal gathered up their bags
. diffidently, while Betsy quavered.
“In the contest announcement u
| said that ‘the fortunate winnci
; would be welcomed with acclaim’— *
| "HEY!”
' Startled, Betsy and Hal turned
; in the direction of this stentorian
hail, and observed with hope that a
liveried chauffeur, beside a dusty
limousine, was beckoning tenta
tively to them. He was a blase
Native Son, that dhauffeur, wh»
' might oven then have been pruning
orange trees did not the studios of
Hollywood's celluloid mushroom in
i dustry offer less labor—and more
pay. He did not stir out of his
tracks, but made the young hope
fuls walk up to him. Then, unpry- ;
ing a secondhand toothpick from
his front teeth he waved it at them
inquiringly.
! "Are you the kids who copped
the Amalgamated’s latest Person
ality and Popularity contests?"
“Yes!” cried Hal and Betsy In
unison, mistaking his sarcastic
naming of the contest in full for s
sign of its importance. Betsy wn
\ thrilled to the tips of her pin
| toes, and whispered to Hal:
| “A chauffeur and a limousine to
meet us. Imagine that!”
At that moment Betsy had not a
i doubt but that if Radian Duckson
saw her the famous vamp would
i turn bilious with fear for the safety
!of her laurels. But Betsy's thrill
was of brief life.
In Hoosac Falls Betsy, as the
prettiest girl in the. county, had
come to accept the ogling of men
; familiars and - 'stt-anfebrs ’alike—a*
j one of the penalties of beauty. SI e
I was used to hearing men suck
I their breath a bit. And to seeing, v
! sudden dull flame in their narrowed
I eyes, when first they faced her.
Now she was afforded her first
1 real shock of contact with the .tinbv
, ing picture industry when 3he
foupd herself realizing—not with
-1 nut a certain amount of hurt van
ity, so accustomed to homage had
she become!—that this chauffetjj
was not displaying the slightest
interest in her. Not the merest
flicker of admiration batted his
eyes as he stared impersonally at
her. In studloland, where beauty
is a girl’s stock in trade, there are
but the same number of degrees of
pulchritude as of virtue —two, good
and bad. The one excites no more
attention than the other.
“Well," instructed the ebauffe
distantly, "pile i». I don’t kno
why, but they sent me from the
studio to'play nursemaid to you.”
He made no effort to lielp Hal place
the luggage in the car, but got back
into his own driving seat with the
listlesahess of a workman who
deals too ' much, with beauty and
too little with brains.
Hal, unchilled, helped Betsy in.
and got in him3elf, after cramming
in the suitcases; but Betsy, who,
being a woman, felt much mogjf
than Hal saw, mentally made if
note to complain to the President
of the Amalgamated Sudios that
he ought to discharge this chauf
feur.
All Hal's favorite heroes t»
screen plays were uniformly genial
and friendly toward business in
teriors; so, in his best Centipeut
drug store manner, he settled hack
in the seat beside Betsy, crossed
his legs, and as much to show ofl
before her as to extract informs
tion from the chauffeur, he sd
dressed the latter.
“Well, buddy, whero do ve gr
from here?”
Betsy had scented the hint of h.
first lesson. Now Hal was to le?- p
his; to wit. that ip studio lant!
there are many degrees of
hard and frigid; and even .*0,.0 o.
the chauffeurs cannot •» hvib.t!
with offhand affability, ilia a C-.:;
tipede ilivver taxi driver. A ehaui
! feur who bag driven Cn p
lia and John Ikuryin.-rv is haro
i apt to relish being c-.impelled, !o
j the uneven flow of bujiureq. to
j«hh« aon-entles from lows,
j ;a! felt Iftest# getting very res
j and v. ; ,y angry under the co<
Staio of contcmytuouß eyes, 11.,*
ever, LUo chauffeur In turn had *1,4
leari,.-.l a fVfetn :he n.py„j
in which daily ha ,c sham l‘:\
being canned and Jellied f„r vi-il,.
sale entertainment. He solved a.l'
his personal dilemmas, and cmi
duct.-d Wnuolf through var...
social annoyances, as 1:1 a f.it-i.cu
actor, John Harrymrrt-, di-i ui-jb
the screen. And Barrjuor., i.j
j doubt, instead of ronulnlnt; such it
upstart as |U!a tfatot •slnnt ,
moot likely licit >,<ra vJth t
sr.psjcfli-.ua kindliness.
(Vo bo c«uunn*f)
M —— "" i" ii ii
one of our most important buttles
i has been won. The tremendous sign!
; ftcunce of this step will only be real
i»e<l iii years to. come.” be declared.
• It waft pointed <uit in, the hisui
iiiu-e "department rlnit the la*
for son* time has provided for <|]p
- submission and insjiip-tloii of platt,
for approval by the' insurance q*.
■partmont. actual inspection us Ihf
Obstruction to see that tbr plain
were curried out to tb« letter bad
not lieen provided. Jills new or*,
now makes it tpauditory the In
6U*uo(, department not only » apt
UNDULY FETED
* " ' ' " CM, ■ ■ - '
Our Promises Do Not
Flash in the Pan
When we sell you anything that doesn’t stand up—that isn’t
satisfactory—we’re the big losers.
We have enough good business sense to know that we must
live up to our promises.
When we tell you that a Goodyear Tire at our price is the best
buy on the market today, we mean it, and what’s more we can
prove it. •*
Just take a look up ; and down the streets at the cars in Concord
or any other town—you will see more Goodyear Tires than any
other kind. We are the biggest Tire dealers in the county.
Drop in or phone us for our price on a Goodyear in your size.
Yorke & Wadsworth Co.
The Old Reliable Hardware Store
Phone 30
. **" '* ' ' '' . 1 -i" I I 111 it i ii,
,Pfove all plans, but to inspect tlie
actual construction to see that, tbel
-vpeciHcatioiis have beou complied!
witli.
*> Vaccinate Every Canine in High
* Point.
High Point, June 2.—»Olty officials
• eg |kk-t to see to it that every dog in |
High Point Is vaccinated and in ad-.
dftibn the ou bbra fiuy a tax- on hi,,
I « her dog. 'XPhc dqg tax i* VI• and I
Im-cuuu- effective' today, in accoi-dani-('I
i With au ordinance covering special
s licenses and privilege*, passed by
f Bfemhem of the erty council last
t Mfffffc. , it -i
i TUooe who bavmieglcited to have
’ ft> pir dogs vaooiaatod iu accordance
With the law ar» eukyect to arrest
b' » 6X* at $W 4«d
. ...........
egeh day ms. a «epar»t'c and distinct
|of disc. Tbp ordinance ,»us passed
jsqmc time ago by members of the
council but until this time com
paratively few iieople have tiled cer
tificates of vaccination iu the city
nyanager’s office as the ordinance
call-i for.
I Water and light meter readers
-ligve been instructed to inO’ftttigatc
nf every Inane they cull and deter
mine if the occupants ,or the resi
’j'dpnee litti-e a dugi- If f ttje meter
ryader ,will report to city officials a(VI
a check will be made immediately to
determine if the dog has been vac
cinated and if license on the dog has
been paid. 1
A man of courage is also still of
fgitb. I
Friday, Jun§ 4, 1926
w i .11 ..i
Renew Your Health
By Purification
Any physician will tell you that
“Ferfect Purification of the Sys
tem is Nature’s Foundation of
Perfect Health.” Why not rid
yourself of chronic ailments - ttiat
arq undermining your vitality?
Puyify your enure system *)jr tak
ing a thorough course of Calotqbs,
—once or twice a week for several
weeks—and see how Nature re
wards you with health. » y \<
Caiotabs are the greatest of all
system purifiers. Gdt' a family
package with full directions. On
ly 86 cts. at drugstores. (AdvKlJ