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Histarical \\Mhhfc if CJma Scott WatiOH (Released br Western Newspaper Unlott.) First Presidential Death A NE hundred years ago Ameri " cans were mourning the loss ol their Chief Executive?William Hen ry Harrison. When he died on April 4, 1841, it marked the first presi dential death in the White House and the end of the shortest presidential term in history?exactly one month. Harrison was also the oldest man ever chosen to that high office. He was nearly 68 years old when he won his victory over President Mar tin Van Buren, candidate for re-elec tion, In the campaign of 1840. The rigors of that campaign undermined his health and the long tiresome Journey to Washington from Ohio, made by canal-boat and on horse back, told heavily on his strength. March 4, 1841, the day of his in auguration, was cold and disagree able. While delivering his inaugural addraas, the longest ever given by any President, Harrison stood out doors bareheaded. He caught a se vers cold which developed into pneu monia and resulted in his death. Despite the fact that Harrison is chiefly remembered as the leading figure in the exciting "Log Cabin Hard Cider" campaign of 1840, he had many other real claims to dis tinction that are little known to most Americans. Born in Virginia Feb ruary 8, 1773, the son of Benjamin Harrison, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, he be came the ward of Robert Morris, the "Financier of the Revolution," after his father's death. Prophetic of Harrison's later role in the development of the West was his determination to enlist in the army for service against the Indi ans In the Ohio country. Morris op posed this plan, but young Harrison \ applied directly to President Wash ington and, although he was only 19 years old, he was commissioned an ensign. His gallant conduct during "Ifad Anthony" Wayne's campaign woo the favor of his commander, a promotion to a captaincy and com mand of Fort Washington, later Cin cinnati, Ohio. In 1798 Harrison resigned from the army but President Adams im mediately appointed him secretary of the Northwest Territory. In 1800 President Jefferson made him the first governor of the new Territory of Indiana, an office which be held for 18 years. As governor he was also charged with negotiat ing treaties for the cession of Indian lands. It was his activity in this regard which caused the famous Shawnee chief, Tecumseh, to unite the tribes to resist further encroach ments upon their hunting grounds. But Tecumseh's plans were ruined when his brother. The Prophet, made a premature attack on the force of 1,000 soldiers which Harri son had assembled on the banks of the Tippecanoe river. That victory made the young governor a popular military hero. The War of 1811 added to his reputation, culminating as it did in his victory at the Battle of the Thames at which Tecumseh was killed. In 1818 Harrison was elected to congress and after serv ing one term retired from politics. However, he was elected to the sen ate in 1SS, but, during the admin istration of President Jackson, his fortunes, both political and financial, sank to such a low state that he was glad to accept a position ai county recorder in order to support his large family. (He was the fathei of 10 children, more than any othei President before or since his time.) In 1830 Harrison returned to the political arena as the Anti-Masons candidate for President Althougt he received only 73 electoral votes ha apparently was the strongest o Van Buren's prospective opponents litis belief was Justified in the cam paign of 1040 which sent him U the White House for his short ant ill-fated stay there. Few at am Presidents have hac mora nicknames than William Han ry Harriaon. Because ha had Hve< en a (arm near North Bend, Ohio he waa called the "Hooeet Farmei of North Bend," alao the Buckey< Who Follows the Plow." Signiflcan of his role fat opening the Old North west to settlement were his tw nicknames at "Hero at the West' and "Father at the Great West.' But his favorite nicknames wer thoie which reflected hta cireer a a military hero and an Indian flghi er?"The Hero at the Thames" an "Old Tippecanoe." ?MM 1 I Village Jail Asks Breakless Fixture* LEROY, N. Y^-Th* Leroy vll lage board wants shatter-proof fixtures Installed In the jail. New fixtures costing $100 were installed in the Jail three months ago after an intoxicated prisoner went on a one-man rampage. A duplicate performance staged by an irate inmate resulted in even greater damage to the porcelain fixtures. Lady in Blue Has Most Sex Appeal Red an Alio Ran in TetU With Piychometer. NEW YORK.?Girls, if you're try ing to get a man?or want to keep the one you have?sprinkle your wardrobe generously with navy blue. It was discovered that that's the color that gets 'em?not red, as you've been taught. Eight men were hooked up to a gadget called a psychometer. Then they gazed upon gorgeous models in colored dresses. It was the lady in blua who made their hands the clammiest, their hearts the Jumpiest. The next most agitating colors were coral, beige an green. What happened to red? Nobody knew. The males who submitted to the paychometer included two actors, Lyle Talbot and Ole Olsen; two theater ushers, a pair of brokers and a couple of blushing football players. The ushers were the hit of the ex periment One of them had the lowest reaction, eight pdBits, and the other was high with 33. When the letter's score was an nounced, a number of the 190 girl students at the Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Research, where the test was held, shrieked: "What's his telephone number?" Perspiration in the palms was the chief factor in the test recordings. Each subject closed his eyes, re laxed. Then, with electrodes strapped to his palms, he opened his eyes and looked at one color at a time. The machine registered in proportion to the amount of per spiration the color caused. All of the men declared it was the color and not the model that af fected them. Live* of Mother and Baby Born in Road Saved by Dog DURANT, OKLA?A Collie dog saved the life of a 35-year-old wom an and the baby to which she gave birth, unattended, in a cold rain on a country road. Capt. Leon J. Thomas, of the Sal vation Army, said that Mrs. Ed C. North rup inexplicably left her hus band and small daughter in their home near Hugo, Okla., recently. She wandered down a narrow coun try road in a cold, beating rain. On the way, she gave birth to a son. She had lain by the road, in the rain, all night, when the col lie led Lonzo Caldwell, a farmer, to her. Residents reported that the dog? they did not know to whom it be longed?barked at several houses during the night, and whined and scratched at their doors. They chased him away. Finally he at tracted Mr. Caldwell's attention and led him to the mother and her baby. Physicians said the child weighed nine pounds and was healthy. Mrs. North rup suffered shock, but was recovering in a hospital here. Army Selectee's Error in Age Costs Him $9,748 DALLAS.?Buck Private Louis A. Neveleff, a former 010,000-a-year ex ecutive, wishes he had looked up his age before registering for the draft. Private Neveleff was a buyer for a Dallas department store until a month ago. Then the army packed him off to Camp Bowie and gave him a rifle. Then Private Neveleff discovered that he was born April 10, 1004, in stead of 1905. The year will cost Neveleff 10,740, the difference be tween 110,000 a year and 021 a ' month. ?* ? aft*** ???? i Abandoned Ship mui Herself Home to Britain LONDON.?A 100-ton "ghoet ship'' I sailed herself 00 milM to land re , cently after being abandoned by Ha crew when Are broke out from un , known origin. Hie navigator lean veaael mimed a dangerous rock by > inches and berthed itself In a wast coast inlet. The engines were left turning over , slowly as the crew fled to lifeboats ? so hurriedly that their wallets were left behind. The flames burned out j quickly and the ship soon will be able to return to service. Well-Dressed Japanese Are Wearing Horsehab TOKYO. ? Necessity being tha mother A invention, Japan ha* ? new cloth thia reason. It is mada at bona hair and la said to rival woolan foods tor clothinf. Tha new invention is the brain child al s Professor Massatoshl Sasukawa oi t- tha Kafoahima Forestry coUafe. If d calls tor tha mixing of old wooler materials artth horsehair and silk. Humor Jostles Aside Justice in Many Freak Laws Pants for Horses, Limit on Doughnuts, Ban on Onions, Are Some. ST. LOUIS.?The stem counte nance of Justice might well break into a smile if the lady put down her scales long enough to read some of the laws passed in her name, ac cording to Lyman E. Cook, aell styled "freak law" specialist of St. Louis. "" Author of a book on silly statutes that are tucked away in the digests of nations, states and cities. Cook cites as a fair example the Fountain Inn, N. C., law requiring horses to wear jpants. Other favorites In Cook's collec tion of 30,000 loony laws include: A Clinton, Conn., ordinance that forbids one to walk a tiger on a chain through the city streets; one in Oak Park, 111., which limits the num ber of doughnuts that may be fried in one day to 100, and another that requires the citizens of Barre, Vt., to take a bath every Saturday night. Bsek-Slapping Illegal. Furthermore, a slap on a friend s back in South Carolina may land you in Jail. And in San Francisco don t prepare chop suey with rat unless you want to be tossed In the clink. In Dallas, Texas, all dogs must wear red headlights. And in Alton, 111., cats were once required to wear bells to warn birds of their ap proach. .. ... Incendiarism is heavily punished in Maine, especially the crime of setting a mule on fire. And it's against the law to exhibit a cow with 10 legs or a horse with four tails to l?wa. . The Monday wash is regulated in Napanee, Ind., where an ordinance rules that clothes lines must be more than 60 inches long, and in Read ing, Pa., where it is against the lap to hang women's underwear in the open. Nebraska has a law that forbids barbers to eat onions during work ing hours. And Minnesota has one that makes the teasing of polecats and skunks a misdemeanor. Another Minnesota law says that a hug and a kiss are tantamount to announcement of betrothal. But Massachusetts' laws say 10 kisses are necessary, and Maryland's say you have to keep company with the girl for three months. Pteeato-PUyiag Mayors. Traffic regulations in Fairbanks, Alaska, include an ordinance forbid ding moose to use the sidewalks. In Puerto Rico playing a phono graph constitutes a breach of the peace. Missouri's statute books carry a law authorizing any city or village to levy a special tax for the sup port of a band, provided that the mayor can play a piccolo and that each member of the band is able to eat peas with his knife. Another hill passed by the Missouri legisla ture requires streetcar conductors to wear red vests. Cook began collecting odd laws 17 years ago, he said, when he won a case for a client by citing an old South Carolina law that required churchgoers to carry guns. Since then he has enlisted the aid of other lawyers all over the world in his warch for freak statutes. And Cook has a favorite. Of the thousands of laws in his collection he points to a Neligh. Neb., city ordi nance as the silliest. It specifically forbids sale of the holes from dough nuts. Low Alimony Figure by Wife Surprise to Court OAKLAND, CALIF.?Mrs. France* E. Petersen is believed to have been the only woman seeking a divorce in local courts who asked (or too Uttle alimony. Twenty years old, and with a two year-old son, she blushed and replied diffidently when Judge Harris asked her how much alimony she desired. "Would $40 a month be all right?" she queried in reply. "No it would not," declared the Judge. "It wouldn't be enough." And he awarded her $1$ a week (Tom Jamas A. Petersen, sheet metal worker. Kicks $68,000 Out of Way, Boss Rocmtos the Reward NEW YORK. - A nil dressed woman, shopping in a market, dropped a paper-wrapped package from her shopping basket and a clerk, thinking it was waste paper, kicked it under a counter. About to leaee the store, die woman noticed the package was missing and screamed. The manager, Edward Culhane, i and die clerk hastily recovered the i bundle and gave it to the cue t tamer. She told them It contained $61,000. Culhane received a $10 reward. The clerk got nothing. ru|itm v?ets a Lift Rifht Back to Prison BOISE. IDAHO.?Jack Fallis, M, decided to escape from the Idaho penitentiary because the state pris on board postponed his parole bear ing until January. Attempting to thumb a ride, Fallls was picked up by three motorists who returned him to prison. Tbey were penitentiary guards. English Girls Live on Charity Maidens From Best Families Of Britain Work for Living in Canada. MONTEBELLO, QUEBEC.?Here in this mountain resort, where Can ada's social 400 play in luxury, 14 English girls from the best families of Great Britain live in an old hotel, dependent upon the charity of oth ers. They peel potatoes, scrub floors,- and make beds like the ser vants on their own estates. The families of the girls "have for tunes running into millions, but war time exchange regulations have ma rooned the girls from the luxury in which they were reared and made it necessary for them to perform tasks they would not have thought of doing in England. The residence of the girls, whose ages range from 9 to 14, once was the Pines hotel and their existence is due to the efforts of Guy Harrison and his wife, the former Julio Mars, of the London stage. Brothers in Ottawa. Last summer Harrison, then a teacher at the Abinger Hill school in England, decided to bring a num ber of boys to Canada. His wife took over the responsibility of bring ing the boys' sisters to Canada. The boys were settled in Ottawa and Mrs. Harrison took over the old Pines hotel as a residence and school for the girls. There was enough money to pay six weeks' rent, but not enough for furniture. The Seigniory club came to the rescue with tables, beds and other furnishings, and the Red Cross and other organizations and friendly farmers solved the food problem with donations. There was no money for maids so Mrs. Harrison set about the task of making her charges self-reliant. The girls were divided into four groups?scullery maids, chamber maids, parlor maids and ladies. The girls had to serve through the three classes of maids before they could be ladies. It's Fine to Be 'Lady/ The right to be a "lady" meant that the girl could, for the period she had the title, stay in bed late, wear the best dresses all day, and be waited upon at table, and enjoy the privilege of having the other girls at her beck and call as "ser vants." She can even go riding and swimming at the Seigniory club, which has thrown open its sports facilities to the guest children. Mrs. Harrison, the "fairy god mother" in the Cinderella-like lives of the girls, finds the role in real life more fascinating than any she has ever played before the foot lights. "Certainly, we are living off char ity," ahe said. "But it's wonderful. Everyone is so kind. Why at Christ mas we were given three turkeys and a whole venison and managed to buy half a cow. We are without money, but it's an experience and a wonderful one. "The girls have been taught that learning to cook and keep house is a grand game.. It hasn't done them one bit of harm. If there is a new world to face after we have won this war, I believe our girls will be much better prepared to face what ever trials it may have to offer than their sisters who live in luxury." Artificial Leg Indirect Blessing for Vocalist MIAMI BEACH, FLA. ? Blonde, 22-year-old Helen Carroll, vocalist with a night club orchestra here, believes an artificial leg has been an indirect blessing. An automobile accident near Bos ton in 1930 resulted in amputation of her right leg, interrupting a prom ising career as a dancer as well as a singer. "I don't consider my accident a handicap," she smiles. "I know I worked harder and with greater am bition because of it "I'm afraid I brag just a little about my prowess in horseback rid ing, swimming, badminton and ta ble tennis." She has submitted to nine opera tions designed to relieve pain caused by shattered nerve ends. A tenth is scheduled in March. American Indians Were First Oyster Fishermen WILMINGTON, DEL. ? Oyster fishing along Delaware bay has been traced to early American Indians. The Indians started their fishing In October and continued during the winter months because they knew the oysters are re best during the Thus the Indians were the origi nators of the custom of eating oys ters during the "R" months, Ditch Digger* on WPA Strike Manganese Ore BATESVILLE, ARK.?AD may not ba c?ld that glitters, but several Works Projects administration em ployees found that It paid to investi gate a strange formation they un covered while digging a ditch, Kraminatinn of their discovery proved that it was a series of high grade manganese ore veins. They found that the ore pockets were rich and extended well down into the ground. Buried Inca Cities Unearthed in Peru Party Finds Masonry That Rivals Pyramids. NEW YORK.?'The city above the clouds" and "the inaccessible city," both lost since the ancient Inca civilization flowered in South America, have been found 12,000 feet up in the Peruvian Sierras, an expedition reported. Associates of Axel L. Wenner Gren, Swedish industrialist who is sponsoring the archeologlcal enter prise, made public a report by Dr. Paul Fejos. The discovery, they said, prom ised to "uncover an enormous em pire of the pre-Incas races," and added that in "sheer weight and magnitude" the masonry already unearthed rivaled "the Egyptian pyramids and Angkor in French Indo-China." The expedition reported that three to five feet of humus and a full grown mountain forest covered the two ancient cities. Their site is a valley in the south central highlands north of Cuzco, across the Andes from Macchu Picchu. Uncovered already in "the city above the clouds," the report from the expedition said, were three man made masonry caves strikingly sim ilar to "the place of the caves" de scribed in Inca sagas as the point from which ancient Andean tribes began their career of conquest and civilization. About 25 per cent of "the city above the clouds" has been excavat ed, Expedition leaders said. Over a 14,000-square-yard area the explor ers found tiers of white granite walls ascending 300 feet up a 50-degree slope, a stairway of 536 hand-hewn stone steps, baths cut from native rock and fed by elaborate water channels, and a sewage and drain age system. British Adopt Fort Plan First Aimed at Napoleon * ?????! i.i a am ziAiom WSTOT TCTI A OUU XXlIi/lO X V/UAOl JUluuxoii PORT.?The British disclosed that they are utilizing a system of sea fortresses begun nearly a century and a half ago against the threat ened Napoleonic invasion as a part of the complex defensive network set up to keep Reichsfuehrer Hit ler's forces away. The sea fortresses?Modernized "Martello towers"?dot the south east and southern coasts. Their foundations are on the floor of the sea; some of them are little martial communities, almost like a section of the Maginot line. The biggest and most elaborately modernized ones squat in the water around some of the most important south coast towns like huge, flat tened gasworks tanks. They house small detachments of artillery, anti aircraft gunners, Infantry and ma chine gunners. The British got the idea of these "Martello towers" from Corsica. In 1794, a tower on Cape Mortella, armed with only three cannon, held off British ships for hours. The Brit ish corrupted the name to "Martel lo." Ontario Plans to Hare War Gardens This Year LONDON, ONT. ? The Ontario Horticultural association will organ ize and promote an extensive plan of war gardens this year as a means of offsetting a shortage at farm help and market gardeners. The society is the largest of its kind in the British empire. Its member ship is 36,000 and its president W. E. Foster, parks superintendent of this city. According to Mr. Foster, the board of directors will bring the plan of war gardens before the as sociation's annual convention next month. After a survey, leaders of the proposal, discovered that there will in all probability be a shortage of labor in agriculture next year. Already there is a shortage of mar ket gardeners in various sections at the province. British Girls' Skirts To Go Higher in Spring LONDON.?Milady's skirts are going higher in war-time England this spring. "And if material becomes scarcer due to the war, dresses may be come even shorter," said a London designer who announced that spring lengths would sverage II inches above the ground. (In New York, style experts said the average for smartly dressed American women was 16 to 11 inches.) Seboel en the Bands ST. PETERSBURG, FLA.?Sun shine school, in this city, holds its classes on the beach, with pupils and teachers wearing bathing suits. Largest Cypress Tree b 3,500 Years Old ORLANDO, FLA?The world's largest cypress tree, called "The Senator" or The Big Tree," grows between Orlando and Sen ford. Estimated from water marks on its trunk to be 3,500 years old, it stands 138 feet high. It is 17 feet in diameter at the base and the first limb is 78 feet from the ground. IMPROVED J3nv>-J UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday i chool Lesson Mr HAROLD L. LUNDQU1ST, D. D. Dmn oi The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for April 6 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se lected and copyrighted by International Council of Religious Education; used by permission. CHRIST PROMISES POWER LESSON TEXT?Acts 1:1-12. GOLDEN TEXT?But ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses- unto me, both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth.?Acts 1:8. Important things bear repetition. Luke, who wrote both the Gospel and the Acts, presents the ascension of Christ, His promise of power, and His command to witness, at the con elusion of the Gospel and at the beginning of the Acts. "The one is all suffused with evening light; the other is radiant with the promise of a new day. The one is the record of a tender farewell; in the other, the sense of parting has almost been absorbed in the forward look to the new phase of relationship which is to begin."?(Alexander Maclaren). I. The Proof of Christ's Besurrec tion (w. 1-3). Before telling of "the day in which he was taken up," Luke makes it clear that the ascended Christ, who had made the promise of power to His disciples, was the very one who died for our sins, but who could not be holden of death or the grave. He arose, of which there are indeed "many infallible proofs" (v. 3). At Easter time we recall the fact that leading historians and experts in the field of evidence have declared that the resurrection is the best estab lished fact in all history. The fact that for forty days after His resurrection Christ was among His disciples, speaking to them of the things of the kingdom at God, is significant and conclusive proof in itself. As the indispensable dynamic of their service as His witnesses, He now assures them that they will receive power. II. The Promise of Christ's Power (w. 4-8). They were to terry in Jerusalem until the power of the Holy Ghost came upon them. This took place on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2) when the Holy Spirit came to abide. We no longer are called on to tarry for the Holy Spirit to fall on us, for the moment we believe. He comes into our lives in blessed abiding presence. But we do need to tarry, to wait for His fullness of power, before we attempt to minister for Christ. We need to yield to Him for His fullness, bringing out emptiness that He may fill us and then use us. The disciples had an important question to ask (v. 6) regarding the restoration of the kingdom. The re ply of Jesus turned their attention from that. future matter to their present obligation to witness for Him and their need of power for that wit ness. This does not mean that His followers are to lack interest in the Kingdom which Christ will one day establish, nor that they should fail to be interested in prophecy and its fulfillment. It does clearly mean jhat we must leave times, seasons and dates to the Lord and be dili gently about the business of witness ing for Him. How greatly the little band of disciples needed power in that day to face a hostile, unbelieving world, sunken in bondage to Satan, and bring to it the convicting and con verting message of the gospel. They received that power, and in spite ol every hindrance the gospel through the centuries has made its way to the hearts of men, and won its.vic tories for God. We need that power today. The Holy Spirit is here to give it to us, as we yield our lives to God. There are many Spirit-empowered met and women in the Church today, bu relatively their number is small Who is ready to yield to His contro now, and thus swell the host of faith ful and effective witnesses? HI. The Pledge of Christ's Retain (w. #-12). We mentioned last week that ser . mans are seldom preached on thi i ascension of Christ, although it hat ; an important place in the Bible i Even more glaring and disturbing ? is the failure of preachers and teach [ era to declare the truth of thp sec I ond coming of Christ. The promist ' of it is written large on the pagei of the Bible, but some men seem ti ignore it. How plain and understandable i ' the promise in this passage. "Thi 1 Jesus"?not some other?"shall ? I come"; that is, personally, literal ly, and visibly. There is no groin* here for spiritualizing, to say, to example that He comes in death or that this was but a metaphorics expression. The text is very plain and em phatic. In agreement, we find among others, such texts as Luke 21 7; John 14:3; PhUippians 2:20, 21 I Thessaknians 1:7-10; I Thessalon ana 4:16; II Timothy 4:8; Hebrew 9:28; Revelation 1:7. Unless we r? ject God's Word, we must receiv this truth, and should receive it wit Joy, for it is the blessed hope of th Church (Titus 2:13). He is cumin again I I 1 tf Ti 1 W t * M " M ?P * x %^r W \ / T *W m ? ARTIFICIAL LIMBS ?nun dmI Urbt metal and willow artificial fruit trees COMPLETE LINE of dependable fruit trees and general nursery stock at new low prices. Free catalog and planting guide upon request. Camberland Valley Nurser ies, Inc., MeMlnaviUe, Teun., Bex 808, BABY CHICKS Bier liar Chick*?V a., U.S. Approved Pullor um tested. Leg.. Rocks, sexed or unsexed. StcrllBf Peltry Pans, R. 1, Mineral, V%. AIRCRAFT CONSTRUCTION IU V?LLI\ r^rrinq course Ffcm THml-Ubrwl Tmrms m mam imsnw to? imwri TIPS to (jardeners QUICK FLOWER GARDENS Vj ANY people want quick re ^ suits in the flower garden, and for them the lists of annual flowers offer effective aid. A highly satisfactory, and eco nomical hedge, for instance, can be grown in six or eight weeks from seed. Kochia is the plant. A single packet of Kochia seed will provide a full, bushy hedge along the front or side of the yard. For a flowering hedge. Four o'clock will produce attractively within two months after seed is planted. Glowing borders of flowers that beautify the yard, and at the same time provide ample cut flowers for the housewife, may Be enjoyed the first summer. The fastest growing and most dependable an-^ nuals for cutting include the Zin nias, Marigolds, Bachelor Buttons and Petunias. There are tall, me dium, and dwarf varieties of each. Most widely used of fast-grow ing annual vines is Heavenly Blue' Morning Glory, whose giant, soft blue flowers are in a class by themselves. It is well to scratch the coat of Heavenly Blue seeds before planting them to speed their otherwise slow germination. DON'T BE BOSSED BY YOUR LAXATTVI?RHJYVB CONSTIPATION THIS MOOKRN WAY ? Whaa you Ral gneey, headachy, logy due to doggod-up bowele, do u milbctm do?toko Fooo-A-Mint ot bedtime. N?t morning ? thorough, comfortable reiiaf, helping you otoit the day full o< your normal energy and pap, Rating like ? -rfliw.1 Faao-A-lIlnt doeen't diaturb your night'? reat or interfere with work the nast day. TtJ Faeo A-Mint, the chawing gum laxative, yooraa1C It taataa good, Wo handy end economical... a Rmiiy eupply FEEN-A-MINT Tot ' Virtue's Complexion Once he saw a youth blushing, and addressed him, "Courage, my boy; that is the complexion of vir tue."?Diogenes Laertius. rNenrous Restless-i 111 fit I BMtlMf IIX V Can't sleep? Tire Hill IV ? easily? Because of distress of monthly functional disturbances? Then try LydW & Ftnkham's Vegetable Com pound. Plnkham*s Compound la famous for reUerlng pain of lrregularpsrtodi and cranky nervousness due to such disturbances. One of the most effec tive medicines you can buy today 1 for this purpose ? made especially for women. WORTH TBYllfOI 1 1 Hallow Sound j The empty vessel makes the greatest sound.?Shakespeare. Umj Warn of DiaotJarad Kidney Action Mn W. wiU ?? hmrr ?** "TO -^Xb&5S5L.lSud Man?(iron hmrr tnim <m ito wmk -IssssKfe ir=??S^:EH ? into. TWIanWrataWli ? i mass : WNU?4 14?41 ; Gooi Memimiise g CM B? CONSISTENTLY >WrtrtW
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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April 3, 1941, edition 1
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