in.
fiM
Nasal Catarrti
is a Dirty,
FiKhy Disease
That coctinml '
dripping of ca
tarrhal mucus from
the head down into
the stomach finally
poisons the whole
body, a condition
known as aystemio '
catarrh.
For more than
fifty years Pe-rn-na
has held an envia
ble record for re
sults in the treat
ment of all Ca
tarrhal cooditicoa.
Sold
Evay vbara
Tablets or Lfqui*
Mothers, Do This?
When the Children Cough, Rub
Musterole on Throats ana Chests
No telling how soon the symptoms
may develop into croup, or worse. And
then's when you're glad you have a
jar of Musterole at hand to give
prompt relief. It does not blister.
As first aid, Musterole is excellent
Thousands of mothers know it. You
should keep a jar ready for instant use.
It is the remedy for adults, too. Re
lieves sore throat, bronchitis, tonsillitis,
croups stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia,
headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheu
matism, lumbago, pains and aches of
back or joints, sprains, sore muscles,
chilblains, frosted feet and colds of the
chest (it may prevent pneumonia).
To Mothers t Muatoroloia also
mad* in milder form for
babies and Small children.
Aak for Children's Musterole.
35c and 65c, jars
and tuba.
Better than m mustard piaster
Slam Consuming Energy
Doubtless the world's greatest waste
of energy consists In denouncing the
methods of a winner. ? Duluth Herald.
DEMAND "BAYER" ASPIRIN
Aspirin Marked With "Bayer Cross"
Has Been Proved Safe by Millions.
Warning 1 Unless you see the name
"Bayer" on paekage or on tablets you
are not getting the, genuine Bayer
Aqpirln proved.jsaffi by. millions and
prescribed by^pbysl dans "for 23 years.
Saj "Bayer' wHen you buy Aspirin.
Imitations ma;
I ?!
Brain* 9 Activity ?
The human brain, according to a
French physician, will discharge twelve
and three-tenths thoughts per second.
DO YOU KNOW
That one-quarter teaspoon of Calu
met Baking Powder sifted thoroughly
with the Hour In making pastry helps
produce a fluffy. cr^at?
Om Saving Gracm -
The nice thing about a phonograph
Is that It doesn't read telegrams be
tween numbers. ? Duluth Herald.
"CA5CARETS" FOR LIVER
AND BOWELS? 10c A BOX
Don't Stay Dizzy, Bilious, Headachy,
Sick or Constipated.
Feel fine ! Let
"Cascarets" clean
your bowels and
L __ stimulate youf
liver. No griping
ly or overacting. Mll
^ IsA lions of men,
women, and chll-1
dren take this
s =" harmless laxa
"" tlve-catbartlc. It
$oesn't sicken you like pills, oils, calo
mel and salts. Tastes nlee ? acts won
derful. Sold at drug stores.
China'* Vast Population
Chir.? has a population approxi
mately equal to that of the whole
British empire.
"Avoid excessive fatigue to keep
from catching cold"; and you notice
countless ones practicing it.
Every one has known one or two
men that boast who make good their
boasts. |
Well-Merited Success
Honored politically and profession
ally, Dr. R. V. Pierce, whose picture
appears here,
made a success
few have
equalled. H i s
pure herbal rem
edies which have
stood the test
for fifty years
are still among
the "best sell
er!." Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical
Discovery is a
blood medicine
and stomach *fttfativ$.. vlt dftrs.t be. ..
skin, beautiAee It, increases the blood
supply and the circulation, and pim
ples snd eruptions Teniae quickly.
This Discovery of Doctor Pierce's
puts you in fine condition, with all the
organs active. AH dealers have it.
Send 10 cents for trial pkc. of tab
lets to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
MEN-WOMEN-AGENTS
1 will establish to* In permanent business
IM? complete Una reliable household rem
cdlN and toilet goods ? known and used aU
over the world. TftfeMSNDOUS PROFITS.
Only small capital Seeded to start. All ex
perience needed Is that yen be wide-awake
aad enthuslastlo. I show yea how! Write me
today, established M yean.
.u.
THE WEEK'S EVENTS
??
IMPORTANT NEW8 OF 8TAT?, NA
, TIOH. AND THE WORLO
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUMa AB0UT_TI!E WORLD
A Record Of Happening!
Of InUroet From All Point#
Of The World
Foreign ?
Greece has appealed to the league
t)t nations against the action of Tur
key In expelling the Most Rev. C)on
stantinos. ecumenical patriarch of the
Grek Catholic church, tfom Constanti
nople. \
Considerable alarm Is felt In Lon*i
don over dispatchos to morning news
paper that a big liner had ^one ashore
on the Essex coast and was sending
up distress signals near Walton.
Dr:-. Anton Hoefle, former minister
of posts and the Clerical member in
the Marx-Stresemann German cabinet,
was recently arrested after a cross
examination by the public prosecutor.
The finance committee of the cham
ber of deputies, in agreement with Pre
mier Herriot. appointed a Subcommit
tee charged with the duty of studying
the question of the inter-allied debts
from the French viewpoint.
Premier Stanley Baldwin expects an
inter-allied debt conference to con
vene at London within three months.
Around the table would sit represen
tatives of France, Italy, Jugo-Slavia,
Roumania. Greece and Portugal, with
a Briton in the chair. The total in
debtedness of these six nations to
Great Britain is $6,370,000,000.
Regret is expressed in British dip
lomatic circles over America's with
drawal from the international opium
conference at Geneva. It is contend
ed that the American delegation with
drew Just when the conference was
on the verge of attaining success.
Greece has appealed to the league
of nations to compel Turkey to per
mit the expelled ecumenical patriarch
of the Greek Catholic church to return
to Constantinople and the control of
the patriarchate.
Premier Herriot of France has pro
posed to a plenary joint session of the
chamber of deputies foreign relations
and finance committees the creation of
a commission composed of fourteen
members to study a settlement of the
inter-allied debt
The storm over the Turkish expul
sion of the head of the Greek Catho
lic church is subsiding. In an effort
to prevent a recurrence of the quarrel
over the patriarchate in Constantino
ple Greece plans to demand an inter
national guarantee against further
Turkish interference.
China, following the United States,
has dropped from the international
opium confernce, thus producing an
other dramatic situation which had its
climax with a violent attack on Ste
phen G. Porter, head of the American
delegation by J. J. Loudon. Dutch min
ister in Paris, who is known as the
master* diplomat of the conference.
Washington ?
There is still a chance for a buck
private in the army. Brig. Gen. Camp
bell King, who Joined to see the
world as a private, has been appoint
ed to be new a'Nlstant chief of staff
of the army. General King Is a close
friend of CJeneraJ Hlnes, successor to
General Pershing as chief of staff,
with whom he served in France.
Investigation of alleged drinking by
midshipmen at Annapolis naval acad
emy has been ordered by Secretary of
the Navy Wllbuh This action was
taken on complaint of four ministers
at Annapolis. Three midshipmen
have been discharged this year for
drinking or possessing liquor. Secre
tary Wilbur declined to give any de
tails regarding the complaints or the
program of the inquiry.1
The Washington committee hand
ling the city's plans for President
Coolidge's inauguration has decided to
reduce all expenditures to a minimum
and abandon proposals to erect any
stands along the route of march.
Deportation of all aliens convicted
of violating the national prohibition,
narcotic or white slave laws is pro
vided in a bill passed by the house.
The vote was 213 to 39. The measure
was framed by Representative Hoik
day of Illinois, Republican. It now
goes to the senate.
The German commercial treaty was
ratified by the senate with reserva
| tions understood to be not wholly ac
I ceptable to the state department. The
principal reservation would reserve ta
congress the sole authority to put into
force preferential tariff duties in fa
vor of American shipping at any time
within one year after exchange of rat
ifications.
Repudiation by congress of recom
mendation by the interstate commerce
commission for retention of the Pull
man surcharge was urged in the sen
ate by Senator Smith, Democrat, South
Carolina, chairman of the interstate
commerce committee. ,
The first effects of President Cool
idge's economy program became etft,
dent with the announcement that fa
large number of shipping board em
ployes will be given their walking pa
pers during the month and that sal
ary cuts totaling a million dollars will
soon be made.
i ' ? - i ' t I
Without a record vote the house I
has paused the Kelly postal pay and
rate increase bill and sent it to the
MMite, which already has passed3 a
somewhat similar measure only" to
have it turned back by the house ss
infringing on its exclusive preroga
tive to originate revenue-producing leg
islation.
A dispatch from Anchorage, Alaska,
recites that the airplane expedition to
carry diphtheria antitoxin from Fair
banks to Nome, Alaska, has been can
celled at the request of the United
States nubile health service in Nome.
! A dispatch from Ancnor%*o, Alaska,
says that 4S0.000 units of diphtheria
antitoxin are being relayed from Ne
nana to Nome by dog teams. The
antitoxin has already arrived at Nu
lato, '80 miles west of Ru6y, on
Yukon ?'?river. 1
Owing to a shortage of funds, work
at the navy yards on both the TacWc
and 'Atlantic coasts will be curtailed
beginning March 1.
Production of petroleum in the Unit
edStates during 1924 totaled approxi
mate 714,000,000 barrels, at 2 per
cent decrease from the 1'j23 figure,
the geological survey says in a pre
' liminary estimate.
The proposed "Nlckle Plate" rail
road merger, which suddenly swept
the Van Swearingen brothers of Cleve
land-=two comparatively yaOng and
unknown men ? into the class of pow
erful railroad magnates, may become
the object of senatorial investigation
Senator Howell of Nebraska, Republi
can, has asked the investigation of
thi? consolidation.
Domestic ?
Counsel began their arguments in
the trial of Ned Harvey of Orange,
Texas, charged with being a double
slayer, according to a dispatch re
ceived at Lake Charles, La., by air
plane from Cameron, La. Harvey tes
tified he killed A. A. Byrd of Neder
land, Texas, and John Springer of
Lake Charles, officials of a tlrapping
company, in self-defense. Riun Tra
han. first witness for the defense, was
placed in Jail for contempt of court
when he refused to answer several
questions.
An order to show cause on Febru
ary 24 why ten million dollars' worth
of stock of the Southern Cotton Oil
company, subsidiary of the iVrginfa
Carolina Chemical company, should
not be sold for $8,875,000 has been is
sued to the stockholders of the com
pany by Federal Judge Runyon in
Nwe York City.
With the release. of Louis Fish, 19
year-old Canton, Ohio, student at the
Ohio state university, City Prosecutor
John J. Chester, investigating the mys
terious deaths of two university stu
dents by strychnine poisoning, an
nounced that Fish was not implicated
in the affair and that he had been
the victim of unfortunate circum
stances. i
At DesMoines, Iowa, the other day,
a bank robber was shot and possibly
fatally wounded and his two compan
ions caught when the trio attempted
to hold op the Booneville Savings
b^nk.
Charges of incompetency and ineffi
ciency preferred against. Dr. Spight
McDowell, president of the Alabama
polytechnic institute, by alumni groups
of Birmingham and Montgomery are
expected to be' presented to the board
of trustees of the institution at the
office of Governor Brandon in Mont
gomery.
Joan London Abbott, daughter of the
late Jack London, author, has been
granted a divorce from Park Abbo't.
The three-year-old son, Park London .
Abbott, was given to the mother.
Dorothy Ellington. 16, confessed
slayer of her mother, pleaded not
guilty when arraigned in auperior court
at San Francisco on the charge of
murder.
W. J. Oliver of Knoxville, Tennes
see, 1s charged in a bill filed in the
chancery court recently by the South
ern Surety company, for transferring
a draft of one hundred twenty-five
thousand dollars to his wife.
Three life-terms and another prison
er serving a nine-year sentence es
caped from the Arkansas state farm at
fTucker.
Having begun his Wall street ca
reer at the age bf 16 as a etock run
ner at $6 a week, David U. Page, at
the age of 41, becomes head of the
New York curb market.
Three hundred cases growing out of
the armed march of men from the
union coal fields of southern West Vir
ginia against the non-union Logan re
gion in 1921, were dismissed by Judge
J. M. Woods at Charleston. W. Va.
The Judge decided the evidence to
convict was lacking.
While Mrs. Clemens Ciucci lay at a
Richmond, Va., - hospital in a serious
condition as the reeult of two ham
mer blows on her head, police follow
ed eveir available clue to apprehend
her assailant.
, William C. Durant, motor manufac
.turer and stock operator, is credited
by Wall street with having made about
two and a half million dollars during
the last few days in the rise of Unit
ed Statees cast iron pipe.
' After Graham Baughn, inmate of the
Atlanta, Ga., penitentiary, had testi
fied that he had been granted a pa
role which previously had ben denied,
after swearing out a warrant for A. B.
Sartain, former warden at the prison
on December 23, 1924, the prosecution
introduced reqords containing a gr^nd
Jury resolution recommending parole
to the federal parole board.
The bulk of the estate of the late
Julius Fleischnpan, yeast magnate, e*
timated at frtnn fifty million to sixty
million dollars, is left to his children,
the filing of hie will in New York City
discloses. He left a bequest of $200/
00 for charitable and educational pur?
pose?. , : ?
The will of Frederick M. Haistead,
wealthy Richmond, Va., eccentric, who
left $400,000 for the erection of a Con
federate monjimeat,.. fcas bpen broken
by court action. The money will he
distributed among the daad man's 'e
gal heirs.
' jf j l , . , ? v > t
Ty Ff&ncir, redoubtable cop and
erstwhUe guardian of the J. S. Cos
den estate- gateway during the visit
of the Prtaco< ,af WileS to Port Wash
ington, L. I J bis been stripped of his
badge and uniform sad will return
to his old trade of clam digging.
After being convicted by a Jury and
facing a 25-year sentence,- Edgar F.
Whalen walked from a courtroom at
New York City, a free man. An in
vestigation following his fervent plea
of innocence revealed thftt he was in
nocent, and the Judge declared him
a free man.
??' .- it ?'
M JAliK
AS SECRETARY
? ? ?
;
I , 'RESIDENT COOLIDGE COM
PLETES CABINET HE WILL
TAKE INTO OFFICE.
Washington, ? President Cool.'dge
completed the cabinet he will take Into
off ce with him March 4 when he be
gins the termuo which he was elected
last November in his own right.
He chose William M. Jardlne of
Kansas as secretary of agriculture and
sent has nomination to the senate
along with that of Frank B. Kellogg of
Minnesota, whose election as secretary
of state to succeed Charles E. Hughes
was announced a month" ago.
The nomination to fill the ^hlrd va
cancy In the cabinet, that of (Charles
B. Warren of Michigan to be attorney
general, was made early In January
and his met with bo much opposition,
hat administration leaders in the sen
ate have hesitated to seek confirma
tion at this session because it might
operate to prevent enactment of im
portant legislation.
Immediately after completing his
cabinet the president Issued a procla
mation calling the new senate in extra
session "to receive such communica
tions as may be made by the execu
tive" Should the cabinet nominations
now pending be disposed of before
March 4 there would rema|ivllttle; for
.he senate to dispose ofyexcept theire
ippolntment of present cabinet mem
)era to whom Mr. Coolldge desiresUO
?!ve commissions in his own name.
Both Republicans and Democratic
leaders said that so far as they knew
?.here would be no serkms opposition
:o the confirmation of either Mr. Kel
logg, who is a former senator, or Mr.
Jardine, who Is president of the Kan
sas Agricultural college and has the
Indorsement of the entire Kansas dele
gation In congress.
The way to the confirmation of Mr.
Warren, however, is not so clear. After
conferences with President Coolldge
early In the week some of the majority
leaders said they would make no ef
fort to force action at this session, but
apparently a change in this program
now is being considered.
Senator Curtis of Kansas, the Repub
'lean floor Reader, said if the judiciary
committee reported the nomination
out the senate would act. Senator
Butler of^Massachusetts, one of the
closest o? the president's advisers, de
clared flatly that action would be, had
at this session.
Police Round Up Lawless Drivers.
New York.? Dennis J. Kenny, 20
year old victim of a gunt toting taxi
cab driver, was buried, while the po
lice wound up their drive against law
less taxi chauffeurs. As a long cortage,
Including Gov. Alfred E Smith and his
military staff, followed the body of the
>x)uth firom the Fifth avenue residence
to a cemetery, the police continued
their activities, arresting 48 drivers
and summoning 947 others fof appear
ance in traffic court. It was the
shooting of Kenny that induced Police
Commissioner Enright to begin a sur
prise inspection of the 17,500 cabs in
the city. ,
Kenney's funeral was impressive. A
nephew of Edward J. Kenny, honorary
deputy fire chief, the youth was popu
lar and had many friends. High re
quiem mass was sung for him ^n the
Church of St. Vincent Merrer's. Gov
ernor Smith came here from Albany
to attend the funeral.
Kenny died of revolver wounds in
flicted by John Leventine, 24 year old
ex-convict and taxicab chauffeur, .en
jtnuary 29. Leventine had driven the
youth and Miss Annabelle Flower from
a Greenwich Village cabaret to the
young woman's Brooklyn home.
fare dispute arose, ending in the fatal
shooting.
Leventine, indicted for first degree
murder, will go to trial March 9. ^ L';
1 "P T ' 1
Appropriation Bill Patted by Senate.
Washington. ? The Independent of
fices appropriation bill, seventh of
the annual supply measures w^s pass
ed by the Senate after having been
under consideration in that body two
daya The bill, as passed, carries a
total of $452,000,000 of which more
than $400,000,000 is for the veterans
bureau There was no record vote on
the passage.
?*
Federal Judge Commits Suicide.
Minneapolis, Minn. ? John F. McGee,
United States district ijudge, died In
the federal building hare of a gunshot
wound, self-inflicted. . A note ascribed
the act to fear of falling health He
always had been a hard worker; and of
late he had become fearful that his
physical -strength was beginning to
wane.
War Dead Honored.
Paris.? President Doumergue. Gen
eral Nolle tt, minister of war, ad M^ron
T Herrick, the American ambassador,
were present at a mass celebrated in
the Church of St. Louis of the Invalids
in memory of the Am6rtoans and
Trench killed in the fighting tn Cham
>a^ne during tHe world, j^ar. The mas*
wis held at the request of the com
mittee which Inaugurated the monu
ment at the Naravln farm last Septem
ber. Qulntin Roosevelt is one of the
three soldiers depicted on the monu
ment.
/Country Club Burned.
Montgomery, Ala.? Fire of unknown
origin swept through the club house
of the Montgomery Country club,
completely destroying the building
and causing a loss estimated at $100,
000. The club house was a large
wooden structure built about 20 year*
ago and was fnsoured for $40,000.
Harry Schalff, a fireman, was se
riously Injured by a falling chfmney
and removed to a local hospital where
4t was announced that he had sustain*
ed six broken ribs an da punctured
lung*. A,,.
... W i rBlf W: MiT iW
NEW BAD CHECK
BILL IS PASSED
t * ?> ? ? t ?
ACT MAKC8 THOSE GIVING BAD
CHECKS GUIllTY OF MIS
- DEMEANOR.
... <! v
V ? M
After repeated efforts^ dating back
for several terms, there has been pass*
?d In the general assembly a "worth*
less check" bill, Introduced by Repres
entative Matthews of Mecklenburg and.
sponsored by the North Carolina Mer
chants' association.
This bill, now law, provides, among
other things, that any person, firm orf
corporation who shall draw, make,
utter or deliver to another any check
or draft signed or (purporting to bd
* ? ?*/
signed by such person, firm or corpora
at ion, and drawn on any bank of de?
posltory for the payment of money or
Its equivalent, and shall at the time
of making, drawing, uttering of dellv?
ering such check or draft, have insuf<
flcient funds on deposit in or credits
With such bank or depository with
which to pay the check or draft upon
its presentation and who shall fall to
provide such funds or credits shall be
guilty of a misdemeanor and be fined
or imprisoned, is the discretion of the
court.
It Is provided, however, that in any
case where a prosecution is begun un
der 'this act the defendant shall have
a right, upon application to the trial
court before the trial and after pay
ment into court of the amount in ques
tion, to have the action abated and to
show that he had an account in the
bank on ( which the check is drawn
within thirty days prior to the Issu
ance of the check, and that the check
was not drawn with fraudulent intent
The word "credits" shp.ll be constru
ed to be an agreement with, the bank
or depository upon which the check
ts drawn for Its payment upon presen
tation.
Fire Protection Bill Killed.
Sherwood Brockwell, deputy Are
marshal, made an impassioned plea
before the House Committee on Insar*
ance Wednesday for some law to safet
guard hospitals from fire, but to no
avail. The committee after prolonged
consideration of a bill that would re
quire fire escapes, stairways built s?
, v
as not to become fire flues, and other
like precautions voted to kill the bill.
The measure has been bfore the leg
islature for a m on tin. It was introduc
ed for the State Department of Insur
aece by Representative Dellinger.
Heads of hospitals in several cities op
posed the measure on the ground of
expense. The first bill provided for
fireproof hospitals, as far as practi
cable, giving two years to make them
fireproof, but this was considered/ too
drastic.
Suffering Causes Pain.
Goldsboro. ? The story of the terri
ble suffering that Mrs. Ivey Wooten, of
the Oak View community, suffered
from the time she was horribly burned
?Satqrday, Jan. 24,. until she died on
Thursday, Feb. 5, has been found. by
her friends and is a diary of fortitude,
patience and hope. The story of her
suffering was evidently written on he*
death bed and states in part: "Whenj
I cams in from the kitchen and saw
that the fire had gone down in the first
place, I put on some wood and then
turned around to give the children
some cough syrup My two-year-old
Child said 'Look, Mama.' and when I
turned around my skirt was on fire.
J.tried to smother the blaze with my
?wester and when I could not do this
I screamed and begged for help to
come and told Katharine to run for
Mrs. Emerson, our neighbor.* I kept
the baby away from me with one hand
and tried to put out thel fire with the
other. I prayed continually to the
Lord to sare me that my baby might
be spared. With everthing burned oil
of me but a binding around my waist
I wrapped a coat around me, took. the
baby In my arme and started to the
Emerson's. I would go a little way,
then lie down and roll over and bej
for help. I finally g6t to the Bmer>(
son's and fell face down on the floor.
The doctor then^came and did what
he could for me. I want to live to
raise my little children and to work
for my Saviour." It was the last re
quest of Mrs. Wooten that her story bq
broadcast that it may be a warning to
people to be careful of fire. 1
Truck Growers Join Aasoeiation.
Wilmington. ? The Wilmington Co
operative Truck Growers' Association,
comprising a majority of the local
growers aligned itself with a nation?
wide co-operative organisation when
the board of directors meeting in
Wrlghteborb, formally authorized the
signing of a marketing agreement with
the Federated Fruit and Vegetable
Qrowerb. The agreement was signed
to take effect immediately, by L. N.
Johnston, president, asd W. C. Mont
gomery, manager. _
Plan Lone Flight.
Detroit ? Plans for the dawn to dusk
flight which the first pursuit group at
Belfrldge Field will make from thai
station to Miami about March 1 con
template but two stops en route, it wa?
announced. The first will be at Dayto
and the second either at Macon o
Augusta, Ga. Official approval of .
flight haa bean received. The date of
the flight will be governed largely bj
weather conditions, Major T. G. Lan
ttfrr. eOHM&dant. mid. Jn $
k HOMt WITHOUT CKftj]
Lacks the Greatest Joys of ?jfe
Many Wiv4* are Childless Became of IllHea i, r,
assess^
fjpl?
A v wS
. MARY R. BENEDICT
STREET, KEWANEE, ILLINOIS
5, Illinois. #- "When I was
married about a year and a half I
took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
because of ill health. I
children. I now
~ 1 1 am
them had
Compot
did not have any children. l
have two healthy little girls and
sure I would not have had them
it not been for your medicine. Last
and summer I got all run
? 1 1 A T Ua<1 OTTT^tll
igular, "and I had awful
and my back and side hurt
it I could stay up only a
Td get so
_i>wn,
headach
me so'
? short
tired an
. ?started
pound
Beauty and the Brute
"He hud pretended to be what she
thought hip), a strong, ruthless brute.
Women liked that kind of man, only
there weren't any, really. No men
that he knew were strong, or brutes.
They were weak, really, and shy, and
lonely, ohly they couldn't admit It, be
cause their women wouldn't love them
If they did."'? From "Three Pilgrims
and a Tinker," by Mary Borden.
md Jt was not I0r~ ,
I relieved Now I do all
a^dbelj) others. I sure
?^Pini&iam's medicines to anv
meet that is suffering f-om M
troubles. I think if r.-,other3%
gir Is would give it to them S
they come to womanhood it JJ
make them strenger. iwu
have known me all my lif0 ^ , 1 J
ished to see me now as i Waa jJL
sickly when in my 'wl3 J
started taking the V..-mablP rj
pound-"? Mrs. Mary ft.
313 Payson Street, Kewar.ee, l? ^
Has a Beautiful Baby Girl ^
Bridport, Vermont. - "I;, ^ ,
place I wanted a baby, but ^
seemed to come to m?. I ju?t J?
children and my hu.sbar.d is away S
day, so I was not harmy at all a
doctor told me I could not hav* .
baby until I went to a hospital. B*
my sisters said, 'Take Lyd.aE.F4.
ham's Vegetable Compound and ft.
will be O.K.' I wan nervous, luj
organic weakness, with backache,
sioeache, headache and no stre^
I had been in bed nearly a week?!*,
I began taking the Vegetable ^
pound, r It was all that ever helped
me and I just winh you could stem,
beautiful Daby eirl. I am fine u+.
and so is she. 1 am still tak
? ?
medicine as it keeps me well., You
may1 be sure I km recommending ti*
Vegetable Compound and aW
will."? Mrs. A. W. Howe, Bridp^
Vermont.
Masic Score
The word scon- Li*
ings in music. Full s.-??r?- a.;a
parts of a composition. In-trun^
score, for instruments ..nly,
score, generally applied t<> a XVi
score with a piano ..r nriran ^
panlment. Vocal sn.ri', uh^re q
voice nas a line to Itself. l'isuio yq
where the orchestral <>r viwal
are compressed into n plan.,
SAY ""BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST!
Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safi
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
Headache
Toothache
Neuralgia
Neuritis
Lumbago
Rheumatism
Accept only "Bayer" package
which contains proven direction I
Hand]
\ w Also
IMpirtn la the tndt Ulk of Bayer Mianfictw of IConoacetlcacldestrr of SaKqUadJ
ir "Bayer" boxes of 12 tibia
bottles of 24 snd 100? Drugjiih
Every Woman
Love supplies a woman with quali
ties she hasn't had Ull she loved.
Every woman, even the dearest, con
siders ber husband sarcastically at
moments. And the worst of it is thai
I'm sure every woman's got Jolly good
reason for doing so.? From "After the
Verdict," Ky Robert Hlehens.
Shakespeare's Philosophy
Why, what should be the fetr
do not set my life at a pin's fre
for my soul, what can It do
tottfl
being a thing immortal ?? Sliukesp^
Few men are greater than th?J
vironment, but great minds
theirs.
MOTHER:- Fletcher's O
toria is a pleasant, harml*
? ? Substitute for Castor Oil,
goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prep^
for Infants in arms and Children all ages.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere rccoc
Grow Hair On
Your Bald Head
Yoa have mad many remedies to
crow hair, that hav? failed 7 Now
try Fortt'i Original Bare-to- Hair,
and grow hair on your bald bead.
\ Drtf Storaa and Barker 8Kbps.
W.H. Forst, Mfg.
SCOTTDALE, PA.
Cor reap? d? ct Ghrn Personal
AttmtUm.'
Ma?ie Goods, Card Tricks, Mriterta Kxpoaed.
rnond Nov. Co.. P. O. Box 4IT. Richmond. Va.
SELF-FILLING
WELL BUCKETS
THEY SINK AND FILL AND CANY
MUDOV THEATER
BMGGSSHAFFNEROQ
WINSTON -SALEM.N.C.
?OLD BT HARDWARB STORKS
t
i'J ,
^ , ?? ?" v^.* ??
?? ' H "
pis?;sou4
Quirt RttUf! A pU?*?nt *
35c and 60c ?u'lS(^
A*d*x*rn*Uj,^WV
Throat and Cbe*
Sal^e. 35c_
ATTRACTIVE, WEL1 I 'M ?
Proved 8-horae farm; 1? r '
Hthta.
mar cost.
HAY? TIMOTHY,
CLOVtK
alao Alfalfa. Satisfaction
ered prices Harry D <-??**"
,J?cl