IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS AND OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN DAYS GIVEN ? THE NEWS OF THE SOUTH! . What ts Taking Place Jn The Souttw 'and Will Be Found In ' ? - ?? . _i. Brief. Paragraphs . foreign ? A complete accord on all tb'e main! points of a S'Tiiriiy pact. '.v:is reached in conversation at G?.n? va among M. Briand. the French f..r.-ijrrt minister:-. t Austen Chamberlain. Rrit.sh seen far ry for foreign affairs ami NT Vau-J dervelde. Belgian foreign minister. V who ar.e in fioncva for the meeting; of the council, of the league if aa- ? tiony. ' Socialists at 'Palmi. Italy, fired upon .- a group of Fascist i during the la?'/-r's cvlebrattonin the main square of that city, killing one Fascist., injuring an : siher ami wo<rciding two spec ?ta'ors. The police -^n^itHj ? several . . . Sc;?\ilists. \ ??? ? ?tain R?>-fcVcf| of the . Ameriear ? . . /^"w blood fiV the French ? .. . " bombed Riffiar. .wneenfra-.' y: rh. Ouergha valley: Rock w '???:iijipe<l ? twelve bombs. causing Jf- "ess .among the ??nemv. ' - ?_-/> fr'i ? . ? - ' . \ TV -? r 'ported* in F? z. French Mo f ? : , i.; rh. Spanish transport Es NV>; ">. carrying. troops from IV \ - r>> Alhai etnas. both in > ? ,>.h Slorocco. has lieen sunk. .F*aH* i'.r*;<h missionaries captured ?? "in central jt-'hina i r- i!; ai '-ordimr .to a <" :ti? ss ?? :?(> the r.?.h Missionary so . r v -Vhatsghai fr'otn- (*h>-ngtu.- ? . -- T|-> .! l?*J i viati cbnjttV ??> ha- arr.ull . hvfinr of -Jese ? i.iiijivp . A'ilUin ili*.:. -a? prvsid'-ht-fof. t r. . ; ' -,v T'.-v . of sean>?n aea risr tho.. ,r<--.. >' ;; * 1 ' :?nniviived waze-.r?-dHctioh as jaViftore serif*', is aspect-- in ' s'ov. .'ftns!-;Bt:t:<h. pi'-rts ..Til* v nu?v. m.-rt has' -r-r- ro S.?:fh:! rrr:i>n. wh'-'r? the - . t-S.r.- :h?? ' Rova! ii;c! lir.t-r Arlan za. . :o s.'ii! for .Bm-ne's ?' Aire..?.';re'-;' ' >?. >! to >:un on." .""<1 a No -'to' "Hull, wh-.rt ri ? sfn -an* n?? ? tir.*; .to take- a -...fir.;.! vote crn'^he. <ine>tion of "a walk -? .? ... . - ?:r (?.->tr::e- Foster., ftrrni- T' "vic<- pn<s i?I? V.i \f aa'io. .if "ass.'tn" W.V. l^fteVfcVt that the An.'.fi'ahs. .hv ... tju r ' rardirii s^" wtljr' r?,-srijrd ?o ':?a-r < r. ii; rh'" teap?:<? h'a;v. made: it more - ult- to hril:?: .a''e.:r c-.mpuN 'scry >< *r!- m. nt o?.-d?'ff.*r? natioi:? either B,;.. .::rh:?ra?.io.n or .-. tbr/;?vh p? rjitanent- court- <>f iR'. rn;:: tion.'il- jtistft*. . Martial > law has !^>vn iNelared all ? r>v'?T -?h.> r?']>ui.Iic of- N':?;ar:tjri;a- Pr<si d-st. St'dorzano ha.* ,r. ftK^.^ted th<-: res- . Jjrratifin iSf G.-ne^il \!fr< do Rivas. who is a ihar^f or-the fortress, ar.d ua-rr>>t*n ;n Mar.aptsa. - in order to avoid a rep?'t1rfon of dieration ? ro th*. -?pifwio't:: ? l?y ? mifitarj- offu'isi*. ' Washington ? Pr> > i?!? nt ("ji^hdpe. -'helieving, . . the : country's railroads shoit.!d IV- > o'nvnl -? i,d:.*'d t>v a s>-r.: >. ?f yijraijtie 'Tr>-rt;?'rs. . wiiT- tirg" eon>:r''-* to *ak?k 'the h?-t>-s- ? sa.ry Vaislat :.v st- p> to that end '.his winter. Th? -r< would l.-c- cnn snrr.n.ated. :if:er - al?pirt. six or peven - years.' ' A plan to :'?m?-:;d the transpor tation. .if ; wa.? asir.^.i upon in a Von f^renc-e - at f i;.- v.in.tuer while hou**" . hy *h'- pres.ul^nt and Senator James: Watson of trtdiana. Republican, and rankinc memh?>r> of the s.-nat- inter ? state commerce committee. Two new and deadly poisons . have' ; j4!?t ea d iscpvered in bootleg li((.:or. according to J- VV Quil 1-e n.jro ve r n m " nt . c h? mi s t . who be.1 iev ee ?1 ea !h s fro m prison i:qi:or will mount as a result of their ;is? * On*' of them is brucine snlp-fcar* : 'the other nicotine altohol. Th< i r'iiser Shenandoah's senior stir-' .vivinx officer r> portal to.th> navy de ' parVm?.nt 'on th.* ai'ternoon of-Si-pieps--* ?. that ;hir-> n wew two ?/ 'in^ur^-d' -and one remained ?s:micc?"j!inr?'d:.. for "in *h> w -fe ef .the .;.:.at dirip- ? . ilde Rear Belle" yillify.' Ohli; ' For.- a second' *h>; >f^-y ? ? ???>. : >ars- .. ?>n? fs>-. . iia$.-.':l-eeh ? ;h:"r"w:i.' !BtjP-ift.<? S?:p(> :::e 'c<;.un. V'li-. ., catij-r: :invir?; huo: ?' :? r a .v-\ i w ? ?;f :h? 'finding <'t th? ruurr yi ;.pp? als In iavcr .t--d?ira! .Rovernm-nt. ? ;Fe'sp;it<!i?-.s, froa'. Manila say tliut" . Lieut.- 'j S. Thorapx n. who. Itilb-d Miss ' A'udr- Iinrlei?ihr will withdraw, his piea cf'"insaiiit> and -enter a plea o{ ?guilty of voluntary manslaughter Brit flen. Sm???Uey. nutler. for some time director of puhfic safety of Pbii adelphia^ will resign on January l. it is reported by the commandant of : -marines. Prohibition's revitalized army took the field September 1 under the. baton of its marshal. Assistant Secretary j'. Andrews, and witfa orders designating ' the bootleggers' capture as its main objective. Mr. Andrews admits that a few vulnerable spots exist in his at tacking lines, but he expects to close them at no distant time. Out of the Haney slew in the ship ping board. President^ ("oolidge is ex- j peeled to seize jbe "opportunity to shape this agency which has charge ? of the government's merchant marine; more in conformity with his policies. ; An offshoot of the current !n|y>3t1 rration by the department of justice and postoffice inspectors of a leged patronage . irregularities in Georgia and South Carolina, is seen in Wash ington in the refusal of Postmaster General New to issue a commission to a postmaster at Claxton. Ga.. al though the nomination of President Coolidge was confirmed by the sen;,ft last session. Reduction of federal taxes last year was accompanied by a continued in crease in state, county and local taxes, a survey conducted by- the Washington headquarters of the National Grange, showing the total paid under the lat ter assessments was approximately 50: l?er cent greater than the federal tax bill. Howard 0 Van San of New Jersey. American consul at Dunfermline. Scot land, died .it his post. Death result ed from heart and kidney' complica tions. the state lcpartnn-n' w.?s in formed. It was * recently stated th.M trie .ef forts ot tii.- treasury to pay off the gi gantic war debt have reduced it at an average rate of one l>tll ;???i d>-P.ars a yeaY, . ' . A Census by the depart nient of ac ric'i'irure i discloses that more !h;;n a half million farmers in the rn.it cd States' have eou'pped their hoin? with radio sets. ' Domestic ? ? '? 'v Watts Gunn. scarcely eUt-otf his In - , ? J. ? j . hoot! from the hills , ot the l.< vakmotit Country dub ami the national ama teur championship tourney of 1925. focusseil the interest of the golfing world on Atlanta as Boii Join's. d? fending champion this year, has t vim - ed eves of the' envious golfers on !ie> Georuia capital* intermittently for half ; > }.?.t a dozen years. - W'J . Horn* o Fortjni. 4". cha;*a? t<-ri..< .1 by NVvv. York City :police as an ;ni>rna ttonal fence a'nd the brains ijt bond thefts ' in tie- i iiitetf States totaling j Over a million and ? -|uart-T. dollars! Was found cml'-.y count? in tw,. consolidated iniii.'rtiw.eiits .-bar. ; os- ? session .-tri- rv and (forget: lil^rtv , bonds. .. 1 .' i The Davjes county .'? lv'at"ckv ? j board of ? -duration has deemed. ,tb;i? Roman Catholic nuns, ?y.-arinj: the , garb of the t'rsnlim order. would "exert a secUirian influer.ee; in th* schools." contrary to law. and 'de clined to elect them. teachers in. tii? ! county schools; ? Anthravft" operators will ins;s' that j a settlement of the present hard coal strik' -include measures for avoiding future strikes in tli'O industry. W. W. In g I is; chairman ot the auvhjstcite op erators" negotiation commitKe, an nounces. in a staieim tit issued at Sc'ran'toh, Pa. ... v-v : Rev: Camplh'ti Morgan of Ath'-hs. Ca. has accepted a call to the pa~;<> ate of the First. Presbyterian church it Cincinnati, tond will . begin .his du- j !':? ,-s January " 1. "In' the. .meantime he will tour the .country t-ondm tini; mis- ; sion's. ?) Selected by Klor. nz Ziegfeld as th most beautiful English girl fitted to join his iriorification Of the American girl, a simple Birmingham country mis*. yt ho uses no cosmetics, has ar rived on the Leviathan in New \-ork i City from England. | A profit of -appro? imaMy ten mil- j lion dollar^ h:is ? be??n- made within a ; three -months' period by about six huh- ?: rjred holders ot preferred stock of the Wesson Oil and Snowdrift companv. a syndicate. announced in New Orleans j the other, day. .< . ? i O. I>. Jackson, who. for the last two: years, has been federal prohibi-. 'sion ? director for Louisiana, assumed command of dry forces :n Alabama. Arkansas. Louisiana and Mississippi September L Will Prazt r .confessed to having ab sconded from Middlesboro. Ky.. with ! approximately six thousand dollars in money and negotiable bonds, after which he eloped with a beautiful girl of Lexington. Purchase of th?J proin-rties of fhe | Dixie Power company by a croup of | New York and Arkansas financiers is. j announced at Little Rock. Ark., by the president of the Rankers Truat cr"mi>atiy (tt I.ittl" Rock. S^'crf-tary Ht-ster of the New ( ' t - ; h:aps cotton exeban;;' says the t nit- t (.ii States cotton exports t" foreign i count ties, exclusive 0,1 ^ anada. to- ? ? :,jV(i iial< s during- August, j. against -,1.'?.'.*?-1 !?ales ih ll'-L- . j In N -w York City, with tlie city p-.i- j tliarie- only fifteen days alu-ad. the j p. '.itk al campaign has betHmie atom; rhan e'v-r-a catnpai^h of bitter l-er -.onalit ies. .. . ? ' " In New York City, a mother-iu-li.w. spiritualisticaily iz?clined. has separat ed Dr. Richard H Hoffman and his wife. Janet Reecber. Hroudvvay star, now playing the lead in "'A Kiss in a Taxi." according to liotfman's suit for separation. r ?Rucky" Maris. Washington Amer ican -League manager, paid 32.77S.57 income tax last year. Harvev i\. Flagler. 80. of Stoneham. Mass.. has fiU-d suit to obtain allow ances from the estate of Mrs. Anna Hickey. daughter of his brother, the late John M. Flagler. Mrs. Hickev is in a sanitarium being treated for mental diseases, having been thero for eighteen years. Prospects of a prompt settlement of disputes between Babe Ruth and Manager Miller Hiiggins of the Yan kees as the climax of peace overtures, following Ruth's fine of $5,000 and in definite suspension seem probable at an earlv date. FLAVOR OF ONIONS ALMOST ESSENTIAL Believed to Be Good Sources of Vitamins B and C. (Prepared by the United States Department of Atfricillturc.) To begin witii, onions are believed- j to he good sources of vitamins 15 and I CY. and fair sources of calcium. Hcnce It is well to include them frequently in children's diet, ami to accustom the futility to the flavor of onions in such u way that its members will not de velop the prejudice that frequently exists toward this vegetable. Union flavor may be so skillfully used as to be almost, unnot iceable. and yet add [ appreciably to the seasoning, of a dish. A slice of - onion may be scalded with the iniU; and then removed before a cream soup is thickened; a few drops <rf onion juice may be added to a salad dressing: ; a- bit of onion may be light ly fried or. simmered in fat and re moved before the meat or vegetables that are to be cooked in it are put Into the pan. For such foods as po tato salad, cream of celery or potato soup, bread siufling for meat or fowl, sieved tomato ami some meat stews, hashes anil croquettes, onion flavor seems to many cooks almost an essen tial ingredient. Either large or sniall onions may be used Tor flavoring. When only a small amount of onion is needed, at frequent intervals, waste can be prevented in tlie following way: Set an onion over the top of a class of water so that the water .touches its lower surface. With in a few days a mass of line white rout;; will sprout down into tin- water, nhd these may he removed one or two at a time. One bulb may thus be made to furnish a teaspoopfijl Or so ot minced onion for many occasions. Young spring onions are delicious when cooked atid served with butter, mi toast, like asparagus. When very small, cut Off atiii discard the tops and boil about live minutes in slightly salt Water. em>!yin;: it down almost dry. at the last. When spring -onions -are' a little larger, it may. 'be better to mince and :ry III em. or -lice aiid boil them. j If niatiire onions are baked rat Tier I than boded, they will have a milder flavor and their od< r during cookjng j will not permeate Hie house so n??tice- 1 ably. sa\> the I'nited States 1 'epart | ment of Agriculture.. Holding them j under water while paring prevents ! smarting of the eyes. If tlie Oiiions ' ar<- to be boiled, the time of cooking will he reduced by cutting them in small pieces, and tin- i.miotis will have j a heller flavor. The water in which j they were otj.kci! may !??? iised for | cuokiti;: other vegetables or liieat, or j put into jsoiip... l'.oiled onions may be -cr\ftJ witli butter, salt and pepper, or simmered ; in cream for live minutes, and then ! seasoned ami served. Wheat Cooked Whole in Pressure Cooker Good Nutrition specialists urge, unions other necessary food*, the frequent use of whole-igraiu cereals in the diet, es pecially in families where there are grooving children who need the vit amins and mineral substances. For tnis reason such foods as whole wheat breads or breakfast foods, brown rice, continent- made from the entire groin, and oatmeal, should appear oil the table at frequent intervals. The whole grain cereals can be prepared iij a variety of tvays. The l'nited States Department *?f Agriculture suggests a way of niaking Whole wheat very pal atable ? cooking it in the steau.-pres sure cooker. This makes an excellent breakfast cereal rich in flavor and fond value. To prepare It. sort the grain, wash it thoroughly, then cover With iiboui two and one-half times its volume of water, add salt, and cook under 1"> to -0 pounds pressure for a half hour or longer if needed to make the grains Soft. ' A generous dish of these thoroughly cooked whole wheat ber ries with milk or cream, and a serving of fruit, makes an bieal breakfast, lunch, or sapper. The gerni and the (inter layers of the wheat grain are rieh. in vitamins and minerals, while the rest is suf'.i an excellent. source of energy for the body that wherever pos sible people all over the woild use wheat ii; < some form as the mainstay of their diet. Vegetable Flavors Are Good in Soup or Stews Combinations of vegetable flavors are liked in soups and stews, ami the sanie idea can be applied- i? make a lunch or slipper' dish and introduce i more vegetables, into lie- diet. The recipe heloU , tested by the United j States I ???; artineiit of Agriculture. in ??Hides Vegetables eas,i!y. [ roc.m-d ? in. j niokt localities the year around. Often | , vegetable combinations may !?<- worked out by the' housekeeper, following the > preferences r.f her family for partiy'u- j lijr Vegetable VegctJble Pic. 2 cup.fuJs f<l ? r I ftir'-tliM j shr<-(l(liil r.'iv. l? r u ? Is 'white sj.-r- ulj-. .null- I or MvVi-ti ti'Vvi ?? r 'rt.-.ie '.r j 2 rui'luK (lli t*il i'aM*:in rav.- 1'iiiTj' I ? ui>f;n tomato 1 cu';ilii! <}:? ?*<! ;u: ? ? r . In r raw oaen \ M- stock ? S.I it. ?.'< -CJXT ?i :? ii ! .sc!;';t tlouKh Cook first f ? ? u r vegetable.* ill !iii;i::i.' water' for ten to fifteen minutes. drain ?: 'add <?'"???(! !.ni?~els sprouts. toii:::t?i juice. ai:<! s?.;isj?liings. I'lace |i;ik i titr dish. I ?c stc k drained from hojb'd vi-gi 'ahles instead of wat'-r or mill;;, wl.i-n li.akittL' I- Uojigh.: far, .-fcjt. Line side- f*n<?t Imrtoit:' ir.g. di'-h: and cover top v. .lli ?lough', j I'akc until '-rust is hrowiw-.I. i'ooked c:i;*.liHower or kale or even ! cabbage (Vvokcd or mw-i may In* sub- I stiiuted for the bru>sels sprouts. ? ? ? ? ! PIMENTOS BEST PEPPERS FOR CANNING Rub With Cloth to Remove Dirt ? After Roasting Cut Out Stem and Seed Par titions ? Roasting the Peppers ? Placing Pilled Jars in Container to Process. (Prepared by th* l"n1t???l States Department I of Agriculture.) The best sweet peppers fur canning i are the Spanish variety, known as pimentos. The fruit ?f these peppers I has a very thick llesh and tough skin and comparatively smooth and free from ridges. Hell peppers are not a suitable variety to can. Only ripe, sound peppers free from bruises should be used. Citn the whole peppers. The small or broken ones may be cut into, strips and canned or used in relishes, sauces and soup mixtures. Remove the seeds with n slender l?i ring knife by cutting around the stem and taking out the inside parti tions To peel, roast the peppers iti a hot oven from 6 to 10 minutes or until the skin blisters and cracks.; Do not allow them to scorch. Kemove skin i with a sharp purliis knife, flatten the peppers ami park in layers in a jar which has been boiled 15 minutes. No wawr or seasoning is usmI in the cann.'-.;; The processing in t!u> jar brings <mr a thick lienor which almost covers them. Put in a place the rublier and top which have been boiled. If a screw top cover is used, screw about half way on ; if a glass top with wire hails, put top bail in position and leave the lower clatup unfastened. Hue* jars on the false bottom in o water-hath canner. If the cover of the vessel In which the processing is done, is not tight, water sufficient to cover the jars should lie put in. Boil pint Jars for 30 minutes, invert to test for lenks and. when cool, store In a cool, (lurk, dry place. IMIHI 11 1 1 I 1 1 I 1 t 1 1 I II I I 1 h POINTS ON KEEPING WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of "HEALTH" <&. 1925. Wentern Newspaper Union.) HOW TO STOP BLEEDING M1 OST people are terrified at the sight of blood. This natural in stinct is probably inherited from our primitive ancestors, who knew that any amount of Needing was dangerous to life hut didn't know enough about the body and Row it was made to know how to stop it. Blood is a vital fluid. It is present in all parts of the body, except the nails, the hair and the teeth. Kven in ?the nails there is blood in the "quick" or living part at the base arid in the teeth in the sensitive pulp. The blood j.s carried from the heart to all parts of the body, by the arteries, so called by the ancient wise men. be cause they were found empty after death and so were supposed to carry air. The arteries break up into fine network of tiny Vessels called capil laries, which carry the blood into the fihest tissues so that every cell in the body may receive its needed supply of blood, < Mher capillaries collect the blood and return it to the veins, which become larger and larger as they ap proach the heart, where the venous blood enters the right side to he pumped to the lung's and recharged with oxygen. Any scratch or cut. no matter how small. Causes bleeding if tin- true skin is broken. Such oozing is slight and is usually checked by the coagulation of the blood. In more severe injuries, the larger arteries or veins ma> be torn aiid considerable hemorrhage may take place. In bleeding from the veins, the blood is dark blue and tl"\\s in a steady stream. 1'nies* one of the large \ ?-ins is opened, venous bleeding j> not spe cially dangerous and is comparatively easy jo stop. Packing the a\ with clean gauze. <t. If this is not availabb-. with clean handkerchiefs anil then making linn pressure, either wit!: the flng'-rs < r by 'glix banda.ge.s. \v : 1 i gen erally stop If an artery :s ?*!??. the Mt ? ! Is thrown out in spurt- with each ci.ji tractio-.i of the bean and is bright red. This' is the most: dangerous form of hemorrhage and should be stopped at once. Every one should know how to check such bleeding, otherwise much valuable time and sometimes life itself may In- lost by delay in waiting for the doctor. Bleeding from a large vein or an artery can be stopped by pressure. [f an artery :ut. the pressure should be l>et?Veeiv the cut and the heart, if' a vein, on tlie side: awav fr"!n the heart. Pressure with the fingers will often stop it but this is difficult to keep up. A stone or a pad "f any kind, '.wrapped in a handkerchief, should be tied around the limb, with the pad resting over the artery above the cut. The handkerchief can then be twisted with a pencil, fountain pen. pocket knife or a stout stick. A belt, a pair of sus penders, a good sized cord or a strip torn from a skirt or shi. can also be used. Twist the bandage light enough to stop the bleeding and keep it on un til the doctor comes. HONEY AS A MEDICINE H1 KIIK'S good news for the kills. An eminent English doctor has Just written an article for the Lancet ,n which he states that honey is a valu able medicine. That's just like tell ing a small boy that watermelon Is good for him (which, by the way. It Is). Honey was the candy of the ancient world. It Is frequently mentioned In the Hible. although sugar is not once referred to. That's because cane sugar and beet sugar, our principal sources of sweetness, weren't known until a comparatively short time ago. When the Jew. the Creek or the Itoman craved something sweet, he had to eat sweet fruits or use honey, gathered by the bees from a thousand tlnwers. These old people knew that honey was good food. They made a famous drink by mixing honey with water. They found this most refreshing and stimu lating when they wi re tired. It has long bem known that sugar and water would stimulate the heart. Thi I " ri-TT. 1 1 ti :a 1 1. with his glas> of can Sucre, is no! such a sissy as -some .would h::\'c lis think. Now comes !>r. <"?. X. W. Thomas of London, who sai\s and has proved that honey is groat value :ti stimulating the tired body both in health and in sickness. In liis article he savs that I ? honey has a marked stimulating effect on the heart and is of value in Severe cases of malnutrition, lie says it is of more value in fevers than beef tea. which used to be the favorite Invalid food, and that it is especially valuable in heart failure. Medicine used to be considered of value in proportion to its mistiness. The worse it tasted, the more good It did you. That was a survival of the days when all kinds of nauseating and disagreeable mixtures were poured in to the unfortunate patient, in the hope of disgusting the devil that caused the disease and so driving him out. They apparently didn't hurt the devil and they did disgust the patient. But lie had to take them just the same Today we are all from Missouri. We have to be shown. We know honey Is good and pleasant food and if it is also a good tonic and a heart stimulant then, by all means, let's eat mora honey. Two Letters The first written twenty year* ago, the recently by Mrs. J. H. Boar land, Franks ton. Texas. June 2, 1904, she writes : ? "For twenty-three years I was Sjfll constant sufferer from chronic^^ catarrh. I had a severe misery and burning in the top of my head, a continual dropping of mucous into, my throat causing frequent expec toration. My entire system be came involved and I grew worse. It seemed as if I could not recover from a constant cough and fre- - quent attacks of bilious colic. My bowels were affected, causing alarming hemorrhages. I tried many remedies and. finally took Pe-ru-na. In three days I was re lieved of my bowel trouble and en tirely cured by five bottles. I most cheerfully recommend Pe-ru-na." June 30, 1924, Mrs. Bourland writes again : ? "I will soon be seventy-nine years c'd and enjoy god health for one of my age. 1 stiil recommend Pe-ru-na and take it myscli when necessary." For more than half a century Pe-ru-na has a proud rccord of good done. Men and women the world o\'.r stand ready to testify to its value in the treatment -oi all catarrhal disorders. Send 4 cents postage to the PE-RU-NA COMPANY, Columbus, Ohio, for book on catarrh. Pc-ru-n-a in either tablet or liquid form sold everywhere. fake Healing -^Sulphur baths TzF->/ home F"? rhei:mat:si,i. gout. < ?? r.\ < r hiv-v.r. !l. U :h:.r. r i y-lj.hur i?ath.s. Y"U '-an on joy thr. ri- ... ir.fc: iathd right *. y> m ami at .-r-.ri.Il coat by u.-ii.l' Hancock Sulphur Compound n:i* j ? ? ai i t...n r.-ir..-iy ? .. : ? .r ? :v }.t- ? :$r? 4 :?> n u-< rr. .st u,. t r. i:. t:.- l.ath. Al.-o t: ? ?: :??*. mul'.y a.- a . n on ail* ? - j art*. "Ji> th?* a: year dnirg I f h?? ? ;inri? ? v ?*. r.a::n* . i th** ; r ? a:.<! ".v<- \v..i . :..i y u a U uircot. ILisr s I.:,- in St'Ll'in ?{<'? a.ny lla. T::: on-. Muryiin ! //(JKC-- * i. ti|- ? ? 1 -^nf? ?v -? < m . ' v.; <?. . Hi.'.!!? ,v#. ,,r /.? r\ ! Grow Hair on Your BALD HEAD BARE-TO-HAIR A Blessing to Mankind Pa-ji Boncjf. Pit caim Ave.. Jean n?Te. Pa..haa Al opecia. which left hirr without hair on any part of his h&jc. Used four bottles o' Bare -t> H3;r No* htf? a full growth c ' hair r" v,\ | as show c tne *' I pho:c Bare-to Hair win grew nair on bald heads. F top Fslling Hair. Danar jfi. itch ing. and nar.y forms of Ecre.ua. Correspondence given penona .utention W. H. FORST, Mfg. SCOTTDALE. PA ' KILLED in 3C MINUTES BY SITiCfOE FOB 50 CTS. * From SITICIDE QO., Commerce, Ca. and at Drug Stores PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Kemorn D ant! naff -Slop* Hur Failing Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Viair Mc and SI 00 at Dnurruu Hiscox Ch?n W kj . Patrhoypc-.N Y. HINDERCORNS RemoT? Corn*. Cxi loo?es. etc.. *top? all pain. ensures comfort to the j foot, mill's wt'.Hnjj easy, lie bjr mail or at l>nig glst_ Ulsooi Chemical Wolfea, Hatcbognc. S Y. COTTON FLEAS cau bo ?-h?'?ply :i?<l >-ITrclivfl>' eontiulied only by attacking the:;. .tloni; mi>ii!l.i!ly new Imrr-. ) If inirr-nrrf in thi- problem, or in the prob lem of mnrral i!i??-.i control, ?no :n ?trueti\e u. t;.!un KliBl) RKSNI KIN. 144 -\V Kilratrtr.l: St.. I'ortlnn.l. Oregon C f~\ ]} IT r YU*C Dr. Salter's XV X ?/0 Eye Lotion rellcTes and com sort* and inflamed eye* I n 24 to 4b hoars. Ilo'.pt. the wi-ak eyed. ccm without pule. A?k jourdretfjcist or dealer for SAl.TtK'S. Only fnjui Koform Dispensary. P. o. Bo* 111. Ai.&nta. Un.

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