-""ti " rr
/ i nr
ftr SI
J fj
'J*,' I ^ >mm
*;#*? { >AsTC~"Hy
gj? .
, j.-,,rf Mar:i>n. at St. Auffustiui
VI
j < ?rit? oJ' Uu? num.*
Id;;: dur.lu' ?';< strike.) 3?Sallo
I' :!ic i>!h?' iii it nmy demonstri
to m oTj
WENT EVENTS
e Votes U. S. Into the
Jbrid Court, but With
Brong Reservation*.
I EDWARD W. PICKARD
I vi'tc "f 1,1 'he senate has
Ij.t.'i! r'hi iUnited States
Where to the [ eniitinent court
justice. better known
I wurhi court. Thus ftie long
Kit this question has coine to
I arc! the administration forces
utaphed with the assistance of
I three of the Peinocratlc senaHowever.
it is a modified vlcm
[hp proponents of the world
for America's entry Is so
about with reservations that It
H many months or even years
lit actually Is a member, and
no certainty that it will ever
Hrty to a case before the trl
first nlace. It is provided that
Br member tuitions must accept
Berienn reservations, and the
lof obtaining these acceptances
B a long one. Refusal by any
Bioii. no matter bow InsignitlBivaliiiiites
the senate action.
Bml tliis is especially Important
Bif tlip reservations provides
Bourse to the court for the set
of difficulties between the
Btates and any otlicr state can
only by agreement through a
Between the parties in dispute,
^wery treaty Is subject to senBovhI.
this means that no cause
H tlie United States can be
Hd to the court without the apHt
the s?uiate by a two-thirds
^ her reservations wpre ndopt^Bt
unaniuiously by the senate,
^^B'S
Hdherewe to the world court
^ t be taken to Involve any leB"?
"n the part of the United
H 'he I.eagu.' of Nations or the
Htm of any obligations by the
^Bt.i es under the treaty of
Hj-'ig the [ nijed States to par <|
'lif nutnell and assembly
Hague of Nations eiptally with
nations in the election of
U'liflil I'liltft
Iie Baited States should pay
?rc i.f the world court's ex.
I'lurcssiorial appropriation.
! 1'iiitiiil siatps may at any
l'lraw '? .mi the world court
the statute of the court shall
liK-DcVd; without the consent
Kited Spites.
cii'.irt shall render no adlinieii.
e\i ept publicly and
notice to all statps adhering
art aid after opportunity for
Hi> st;itf concerned, and that
; stuil! hot, without the conttie
1'iijteil States, entertain
est for any advisory opinion
'any diispute or question In
| railed States has or claims
let
feserwiiiotis wore put In their
|e hy Democratic leaders and
Is sett Moore, the present
I judge. in the world court,
k whicjt were offered by opIf
the resolution were rejectk-orth
i while recording the
those who voted against the
I on the final ballot. They
lepuhlieans; Borah. BrookBd'l.
Kra/.ler. Harreld. Johnfc'ollettp,
Moses, Nye, Bine,
I (huh). Schiill, Watson and
I Democrats: Blease. Iteed
fcrmer I.ahor: Shlpstead.
ore the tlnal vote was taken
ohnsoti of California had a
to say. a dramatic warning
leagues that they were tak st
step into tlte Beague of
Bering the traditional poll^
I'litteil States, and "cotfintr
. - - - * ? j
ill on mi uncharted sou."
Borah. leader of the oppo- I
ie world t-oiirt. declares the j
itily begun and that he and
lates Intend to launch a
at once to get the country
[court and will make this an
In- election of senators next
Empire Bkilder
Applies for Pension
Colorado friends of Dick
last survivor of Kit ('.arson's
Bad of Indian scouts, who
1 Denver, are trying to have
Bass a special act granting
ion so that,he may pass his
ears In comfort,
fttm also seKed the govern i'T
ways, iflice under (Jen.
:<n. hut was never enlisted
lor this reason he Is uot
I
e, Fla., built by the Spaniards in 1838 a
tchens that are relieving the distress !
rs marching through the streets of Los
ition.
November. He says he does not see
how we are going to remain outside of
the league if we stay in the court.
HAVING disposed of the world
court matter, the senate on
Thursday began consideration of the
tax reduction bill, which was made
its unfinished business so thpt it could
be kept continuously before the chamber.
Chairman Smoot of the finance
committee hopes to have the measure
passed by February 10, but certain of
the western senators have promised
a long fight against the provisions for
repeal of the Inheritance tax and of
publicity for Income tax payments.
Norrls of Nebraska has offered an
amendment providing that returns
"shall be open to examination and Inspection
as other public records under
the same rules and regulations as may
govern the examination of public
documents generally." The effect of
this would be not only to permit public
Inspection of amounts paid by taxpayers,
but also to throw the returns,
which at present are secret documents,
open to any one desirous of perusing
them,
WITH only three votes against It,
the administration Hnugen measure
establishing a co-operative marketing
division In the Department of
Agriculture was passed by the house.
The big fight In congress Is over the
Dickinson farm surplus bill. Experts
are far apart In their opinions of the
wisdom of this measure. Such agriculturists
as Frank O. Lowden are
warm In approval, while many trade
economists, notably John W. O'Leary,
president of the Chamber of Commerce
of the United States^ feel thajf
It Is In effect a price-flxtng measure
and would prove disastrous to those
whom It Is Intended to benefit.
Representatives of the eleven states
that compose the corn belt met In
Des Moines Thursday to formulate a
relief plan designed to place agriculture
on a money-making parity with
manufacturing and business enterprises.
This plan embraces three
main features: An export corporation
to dispose of surplus agricultural
products; provision by congress for a
federal farm board to stabilize agrl"iiiii.ro
nnd nut It on a parity with
other business; removal of the pure
food law discriminations against corn
su^ar. An executive committee of two
from each of the eleven states was
named to draft the plan Into a measure
and to push Its passage in conj
gress.
TBltltlFIC gales swept the north
Atlantic last week .and all the
liners were delayed. The storm took
its toll of lives when the British
freighter I.arlstan foundered off Halifax.
twenty-five members of her crew
being drowned. Another British
freighter, the Antlnoe, was disabled by
the tremendous seas and the United
States liner President Roosevelt, commanded
by Captain Fried, stood by for
four days, making repeated efforts to
save the crew of , twenty-five. The
heroic work of Fried and his men wus
finally successful, though two of the
rescuers lost their lives, ("apt. Herbert
Hartley of the Leviathan said the
gale was the worst he had seen in
thirty years.
PRESIDENT COOLIDGE formally
approved the court-martial sentence
of Col. William Mitchell, but
changed It so the colonel should re
celve half pay and his allowances "during
the pleasure of the President."
Two days later Colonel Mitchell resigned
from the army, and It was believed
his resignation would be accepted.
Ijt Is understood Mitchell will
go on thej lecture platform to continue
his campaign for development of aviation,
but ^nany persons believe he will
find It difficult, as a civilian, to hold
the publltj Interest.
Chancellor luther presented
to thej German relchstag the names
of his new cabinet members and an
outline o^ their policies, but was met
with glum silence except for the howling
of Communist deputies. The Nationalists
objected to his omission of
the conditions they demand as the
price of Germany's entry Into the
League of Nations. The Socialists
were disappointed by the vagueness of
his reference to German membership
In that body. They were also annoyea i
I still more by his rejection of a popu- I
eligible for a pension unless special
legislation provides for him.
In appearance the eighty-year-old
plainsman Is almost the double of
the late BufTalo Bill, his co-scout. Like
Colonel Cody. Rutledge has flowing
locks; sweeping mustache and goatee.
He towers 6 feet 3% Inches, greater In
height by 1>? Inches than Buffalo Bill
A vivid memory of Rutledge Is the
time he end Carson, in the spring of
1808, were attacked by 70 Apaches in
a lonely Rass on Trlncharee mountain,
near the ! Colorado-New Mexico lin?^
t
I ' \
lar referendum of the claims of .the
Hohenaollerns and other former reigning
families against the republic. Next
day. announcing himself as absolutely
In favoir of fulfillment of the Locarno
pact, ijoetor Luther Issued an ultl
matum to the warring factions, demanding
a vote of confidence for his
government. He made more definite
his recommendation of membership In
the League and thereby gained the
silent support of the Socialists, but
even so It was evident that the fate
of the cabinet hinged on the chance
absence of a very few deputies.
The reichstag gave Luther his vote
of confidence by 100 to 150, those who
abstained from voting numbered 131,
mostly Socialists. This slight iuajority
was obtained only after President
von Hlndenburg had threatened to
dissolve the reichstag if opposition
continued.
Wednesday was the sixty-seventh
birthday of the former kaiser, and the
Berlin Fascists who celebrated the annlversarV
engaged in a sanguinary battle
with] the Communists who were
burning fwilhelm In effigy. The police
were forced to fire on the mob, wounding
man^r.
VISCOUNT TAKAAKI KATO, premier
of Japan, Is dead of influenza.
ant} political conditions In Tokyo
are chaojlc as u'-result. It. Wakatsukl
is acting1 premier. It Is expected the
diet will be dissolved shortly. Kato
was one jof his country's most accoro
plished statesmen.
ALL the civilized world, with the
possible exception of Germany
nnd her Ikfp allies, iolned the Belgians
In mourtjlng the death of Cardinal
Mercler, 'whose heroic stand against
the Invnders of his country gave him
lasting fijme. On Thursday Belgium
paid fornial tribute to the memory of
her belovjed primate and the king as
chief mourner walked through the
streets of Brussels after the coffin
while minute guns boomed and massed
army barid^ played funeral marches.
With King Albert inarched Prince Leopold,
the jheir apparent, and Marshal
Foch, geierallssimo of the allied
armies In ihe war; and In the long procession
were the diplomatic representatives
of many nations. Services
were helc In the Cathedral/of St.
Michel and St. (Judaic where the body
of the prelate rested on a magnificent
catafalque. On Friday the body was
taken bacl^ to Stallnes and burled with
great pomp beneath the altar of the
Cathedral there.
ITALY, by what some correspondents
describe as strong arm methods Involving
threats against peace in the
Near Fast has persuaded Great Britain
to graijt her very easy terms In the
funding of her war (lent?better terms
than were obtained from the United
States. (i'ount VoipJ and Winston
Churchill have signed the agreement
by which tlie Italian debt is settled for
about one-sixth of its^'alue. !
Premier Mussolini and his govern
ment nre Ijeing roundly abused by the
Germans for their repressive measures
in south T]yrol, where they are determined
to Italianize the German inhabitants.
The latest decree orders,
the Itallanizntlon of all German family
names that were originally Italian.
TWO Spanish aviators started last
week fpm near Cadiz to fly in a
seaplane tjb Buenos Aires, Argentina,
and before this reaches the. reader
they may nave accomplished the feat.
Their first hop took them to the
Canary Islands, and from there they
flew to thi Cape Verde islands. The
next hop t^as to be 1,432 miles to Fernando
Nor >nha island, or possibly 275
miles furti er to Pernatnbuco.
FRANCE believes that Investigation
of the | rent French franc forgery
plot in H ingary will reveal that it
can be trt ced to German monarchist
sources, and therefore Premier Brland
demanded that French officials should
be permit1 ed to participate In the
police cross-examinations of the plot-'
ters, anion ; whom are princes, nobles t
and high jolltlclans. The Hungarian
governmen made a show of yielding
reluctantly but the well Informed said
that the Incident was really a victory
for Premh r Count Bethlen, since It
afforded him an opportunity to bring
about a till exposure of the conspiracy
wlihout Incurring blame from
the extrem sts who have been seeking
to unseat 11m.
For 48 hoi rs they stood off the band,
killing neai ly a dozen before escaping
under cover of darkness.
. With Sh >rldan, Rutledge took part
In several pitched battles with Indians.
Once they pursued a band of Comanches
ni d rescued two white women
that hat been captured three years
previously. During all his adventures
with Cody, Carson and Sheridan, Rutledge
escujjed with but two minor arrow
wound i.
Inflrmltle 9 due to advanced age
I have incapacitated the veteran. I
I
<1 1
?OLK COUNTY NEWS, TRYON
FLUSH |TANK TROUBL
'
^ ^Thumbscrew
Hm ' ^P1
I \
Thumbscraw
BSj
In BF
^SSI'
V ; *
Compound Levtr Bai
(Prepared *7 th? United Statea Department
of Agriculture.)
Anions; the parts jof the home plumbing
system most frequently out of order
and needing attention Is the flush
tank of the toiled. Very often the
trouble may be easily located by a
member of the family and corrected
at little cost without sending for a
plumber, says the United States Department
of Agriculture In a new
Farmers' Bulletin, "Simple
Plumbing Repairs In the Home." The
first Illustration, Figure A, shows an
ordlnury compound lever ball cock to
control jthe water supply In a flush
tank. The float hall and the seat
washer on the bottom of the plunger
are the only pnrts likely to need repairs.
The huoyapcy of the float Is
B I t
" Ift
11
TvSoft Se^s Washer)
-Brass Holder Cap/^*N
(Xj
' R^
- kzL , -
Plunger and Washer Holder Cap.
1
the force which lowers the plunger,
shutting off the water as the tank
fills. A leaky, waterlogged float holds
the plunger up, permitting constant
flow and waste of water. A small
leak In a copper float can be soldered.
If n class float Is hrnken or a eontipr
float is badly corroded, do not try to
repair It. A new five-inch copper float
costs about 40 cents.
Plunger and Waaher.
Figure B shows the plunger and
washer-holder cap which screws on
the bottom of the plunger. The washer
should be soft rubber or leather,
because the force which holds it to its
seat Is not heavy. The cup is thin
brass. To replace the washer, shut
off the water and drain the tank. UnMAKE
BUDGET TO
HELP IN SAVING
Get Whole Family to Co-operate
in Plan.
A
(Prepared by the t'nlted States Department
at Agriculture.)
Resolve to save itiore in 1020 than
you did last year. The bureau of
home economics of the United States
Department of Agriculture says,
"Make a budget," ajnd tells you now
to do It.
First, estimate the size of your Income
for the comlna year, without beInsr
too optimistic. I'ut down what
you are fairly sure you will have. It
is always easier til spend a bit of
" t /:s . .. - i ' > '
, J : r ;: * '
l aajaam -l
Farm Woman Keeping Her Farm
Records and Household Budget.
extra Income than It Is to make a
smaller income go a little farther.
Now make a list of all the things
your family will have to have for the
year. Kent, fuel, light, and all the
things for running the house, food,
clothes for each person, taxes, Insurance.
You ought to have some fun,
buy some books, give something to a
good cause. You must look after your
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
In making mayonnaise, the salt
should go in last.
* *
One may roust meat and bake a
sponge cake at the same temperature.
?
If the ?cup in which molasses Is
measured is greased every bit of the
molasses will come off.
An excellent celery seasoning: l'ut
5 cents' worth of cWery seed through j
IT i
, y. c. i l
.ES EASILY REPAIRED
L
;
. }'/ ,}]<
' v'.: ''" . ''*' ' **
'W-- '-'' ? y'i-;! '
-p.: P?TPpW # i; ::;pp
' ' ' - "P -'Z * P
%
Pif
A
- - : ' --1 " :
I Cock in Flush Tank.
screw the two thumbscrews which
pivot the float-rod lever an<i plunger
lever. Push the two leveris to the
left, drawing the plunger leve- through
the head of the plunger. Lilt out the
plunger, unscrew the cap on the bottom
of the plunger. Insert a soft, new
washer, and reassemble the parts. The
cap may be so corroded and weakened
that It breaks duifng removal from
the plunger. A new cap Is then .necessary,
and It Is well to have one or
two on hand. When nuttintr a washer
on a ball cook, examine the seat to
see that It Is free of nicks and grit.
It may need regrlnding.
A flush valve, used In a low tank,
Is also erratic. "Probably no other
plumbing in the home needs attention
so often. It is under water and subject
to fouling and neglect. The hollow
rubber bail gets out of shape and
fails to drop squarely Into the hollowed
seat. The handle and lever fall
toAvork smoothly or the lift wires get
out of plumb, causing the ball to remain
up when It should drop to Its
seat. To remove these difficulties,
stop Inflow to the tank by holding up
the float of the bull cock or supporting
It with a stick. Drain the tank by
raising the rubber ball. If the ball Is
worn, out of shape, or has lost Its
elasticity, unscrew the lower lift wiiv?
from the ball and replace with a new
one. A 2%-Inch rubber ball c<j^ts
about cents, and a new one should
always be kept In the home. The lift
wires should be straight and plumh.
The lower lift wire Is readily centered
over the center of the valve by means
of the adjustable guide holder. By
loosening the thumbscrew, the holder
is raised, lowered or rotated about the
overflow tube.
Adjustment Important.
By loosening the lock nut and turn
ing the guide screw, the nortzontut
position of the guide is fixed exactly
over the center of the valve. These
adjustments are very Important. The
upper lift wire should loop Into the
lever arm hole nearest to a vertical
from the center of the valve. A tank
should empty within ten seconds.
Owing to lengthening of the rubber
ball and insufficient rise from Its seat,
the time may be longer than ten seconds
with a correspondingly weak
flush. This trouble may be overeome
by shortening the loop In the upper
lift wire. A drop or two of lubricating
oil on the lever mechanism makes
it work more smoothly.
health. You want to save something.
Put it all down. Include every little
item and what you think i each will
cost. Add up your list. How does It
compare with your estimated Income?
If it Is smaller, you are happy. If not,
go over your list. I'se your imagination.
There are leaks, and you can
find them. Rut you can't spend more
than you make and be comfortable.
Your budget Is made. You have ja
spending and suvlng plan for 1926.
Get the whole family to co-operate In
littfnir it Vn rinnht hpfnrp thp vmp! is
over by all working together you will
Improve it. There Is no law agalnsl
changing a budget once made if you
change it for the better.
The budget will be easy to live ufi
to if you get an account book?any
blank book will do?and write down
In It each day what you have spent.
Don't jumbte up all the Items together.
Put all the food Items on ODe pag^,
all the clothes on another, all thje
savings on a third, and so on. Adjl
up each page at the end of every
month. Compare the totals with your
budget.
Spoon Cornbread With
Bacon Is Hard to Resist
Spoon cornbread with bacon Is a
breakfast combination that Is hard to
resist. The spoon bread Is usually
baked In an Iron skillet, a though a
baking dish may be used. Eecause at
Its smooth, rather moist tex :ure, It m
eaten with a spoon or fo -k. Thje
United States Department or Agriculture
gives the following directions for
making spoon bread:
Spoon Bread.
1 cupful cornmeal 2 cupfu s water '
1 teaspoonful salt 2 eggs
1 tablespoonful fat 1 cupfu milk '
Place the meal, salt, shortening and
water In a double boiler and cook fo^
ten minutes, stirring un{U i hick and
smooth. Allow this to cool, then adq
the well-beaten eggs and flially thin
down to a batter with the m Ik. Beak
well, pour Into a greased pai or baling
dish, bake In a rather hot oveii
for about thirty minutes, and serv?
<n reeflv from the nan In which it was
cooked.
the finest knife of the chojper, ml::
with ten times Its bulk in (able sail
and store In tightly covered bottle.
String sets of buttons on fine wlr^
when you put them away and save a
lot of time when you start to hunt
In the button box.
?
Id Diaking the casing for t n elastic
round the hem of a "harem" skirt, remember
to make the band as full a$
the skirt, and let the elastic not th$
band, pull in the fullness, i
- -
. I
I
j DOINGIS IN jTHE^
ii TAR HEEL STATE ii
> i < *
? t )< > 11 ft tit' >
I NEWS OF NORTH CAROLINA !!
TOLD IN 8HORT PARA- ! |
GRAPHS FOR BU8Y PEOPLE
Greensboro.?The Gilford county
auditor, completing a compilation of
the taxable wealth of the county, announced
it as $162,000,000. That is a
gain over last year of aboi t .$5,000,000.
Kinston?The Lenoir ccunty cotton
- 100S nrnaoHoll IllnftO baleS.
I tivp 1U1 Xs/tJ t/ bAVUVUVU - ,
brokers here estimated. With ginnings
to January 1, placed at 13,751
bales, buyers believe receipts since
that date and the staple outstanding
will carry to total well past $14,000
bales.
Murphy.?Plans for the construction
In the near future of a nodern fireproof
courthouse, to replace the courthouse
destroyed by fire here recently,
are already being whipped into shape
by the county commissioners of Cherokee
county.
Asheboro.?E. C. Watkink secretary
and treasurer of the Ramjseur Furniture
company, Ramseur, announces
the letting of a contract by his company
for the erection of a large brick
addition to cost approximately $100,000.
Hamlet.?The city commissioners at
their regular meeting auti^drized em?
i?* ? '?U Hmo fllraman nnrl
plU,)'mem 01 a mil biuio >?> ytuuu
the installation of six or,eight additional
hydrants, which will give Hamlet
a second class fire insurance rating;
instead of third class as at
present.i
Hickory.?An active nfcembership
campaign was inaugurated hy Hickory
Post No. 48 of the American Legion.
The outfit has been divided into
fwo divisions with Captain! Lawrence
Cline as commanding general of the
eqtlre post.
Greensboro. ? Teachers must, pay
state income taxes the sam|e as other
people, according to information received
here by the office of the Guilford
county superintendent! of education.
The information cam^, upon request,
for the state commissioner of
revenue, R. A. Doughton, a|t Raleigh.
Greenville.?Robert H. Widght, president
of East Carolina Teachers' college
and also president of the American
Association of Teachers' colleges,
has been selected as one 0l{ the high
officials at the inauguration of i Dr.
Charles C. Sherrod, president of jTennessee
State Teachers' college, j
Macon.?Robbers entered the Bank
of Macon and obtained $2,50|0 in leash
and a quantity of securities, (the Value
- * 1 >??*> InoH
I of which naa nor oeeu
The bank building was entered from
I the rear and ah acetylene tprch used
in opening the vault and sale.
Greensboro.?For the second time
I within a few months the | Guilford
I county commissioners declined to {loan
the state highway commission $250,000
I with whlc^i to widen and siraighten
the High point road. Action was (taken
following the appearance of a; delI
egatlon from the chambers of pom
merce of Grenesboro and Hiijh Point.
I the Greensboro Merchants association
and many other interested organizations.
Greensboro.?J. H. Smith, ban^UIe,
Va^ taxi driver, was compelled tyy;a
I youth about 18 years of age wl(h a
pistol to drive him to Greensboro and
was robbed of his pocket book [and
I watch. Smith reporting to the police
here, and that he was approached by
the youth, not identified, and f hired to
make the trip to Schoolfield, Va. ! j
Statesville.?The outstanding stlrucI
ture among Statesville's buildin j acI
eomplishments during the past yeajr id
the new Davis hospital. Just completI
ed and occupied. The Davis hospital,
formerly known as the CarpenterDavis
hospital, has for a number of
~ ' in n tWo-fltorV
years oeeu uireiovw ... _
brick building on South Centek street.
Raleigh^?Joe Singleton, siity-yearold
white man from Goldsboro.j entered
the state's prison with prospects of
reaching ninety before he gets out.
He was convicted i3 Wayne puperior
court of killing Atlas Durham,}a white
man, last Christmas Eve, and jie drew
a sentence of thirty years.
Winston-Salem?Engine No.l 347, of
the Southern railway, lead engine of
a double-header, pulling a train loaded
with products of the R. J. Reynolds
company out of this city to Charlotte,
has just received a special designation
in the form of a trinagular align
placed on the front of the engine.
This sign proclaims the train the
"Camel Special."
Greenville.?At a meeting of the
Greenville Board of Trade Friday, February
12, was definitely decided upojn
as the closing date for the loaal market.
Statesville.?According to the report
of Elam E. Sherrill, statistician far
Iredell county, 16,256 bales of] cotton
were ginned in the county frpm the
?- i Ifl 1Q9S Ja
1 yZD crop prior to jouuBi; awt ??
compared with 14,102 bales to J anuary
16, 1926. In consideration of the almost
unprecedented drougth durlnjg
the past summer, the cotton crop lb
Iredell Is turning out much better than
was anticipated.
Greensboro.?The board of directors
of the North Carolina Tuberculosis
sanatorium, meeting at Sanator
ium, awarded the contract fori 4 children's
home, an innovation at tie sanatorium.
Contract went to Joneji
Brothers and company, of Wilson, who
bid low, $80,445, for the general contract.
Oxford.?Telegram from Mil is Ada
Michael, announced the death of her
sister, Mrs. Henry T.. Terrell, wio wai
injured in auto wrack at Oca! a, f^sj.
Mrs. Terrell was the wife of a prominent
banker and has relatives i In North
Carolina.
ZZ?, I
1
. \
Are Your Household
Cares A Burden?
i I.ouisburg, N. C.?['When I started
taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery,
my housefhold
cares were a
burden to me, I was
weak and rundown,
nervous, had a dry,
hacking cough of
twenty years standing,
was constipated,
appetite poor,
arid had lost m
weight from 100 to
85 pounds. After
tajcing the first bottle
of the 'Discovery*
I began to It^profe and my cough
was almost gone. I am now able to do
my domestic work arid have regained
my regular weight. I relish my food
and rest good at nigpt."?Mrs. J. P.
Pleasants, Route 2?Box 37.
All dealers. Tablets or liquid.
Keep your horses working with H
"SPOHN'S." Standard rem-Hifl|
edy (or 32 years (or Distemper. [?fi<d?]
Strangles. Influenza, Coughs and
Colds. Give to sick end those ez-|TnRS
posed. Give "SPOHN'S" forDc?Die- UUgifi
temper. Sold by your druggist. If not, ESRH
order fraa es. Binsll bdttk SS touts, large
(I SO. Wrlto for frto booklet on dloooaoo.
POHNMEMCJU.CO.Oe*. COSHPi. WO. I'M!
w
F SOOTHES
jjftr BURNS
Nothing more comforting
M than "Vaseline" Jelly. Eases
pain. Hastens nature's healing.
Wonderful for cuts,
scratches, bruises and other
little accidents.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
ie.~liM.udi
v - Scat* Street ?N?w ion
Vaseline J
u? u. *. fat. orr
PmtOLCUM JELLY PW
The Pupil's Version
Sophomore?Teacherk are worse
than Immigration officers nowadays.
Alumnus?How come? -i
"They's swiped the slogan: 'They
shall not pass.'"?The Open Ilond.
MOTHER!
Clean Child's Bowels with
"California Fig Syrup"
1W ^
Hurry Mother! Even a bilious, con
stipnted, feverish child loves the pleasant
taste of "California Fig Syrup"
and It never falls to cleanse the bowels
and swepten the stoma ?h. A teaspoonful-teduy
may prevent a sick child tomorrow.
Ask your drpgglst fnj- genuine "California
Fig Syrup" whien has directions
for babies and children of all ages
printed on bottle. Motner! You must
so.v "California" or yj>u may get an
: Imitation fig syrup.
Asp
Have you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
T&ke BHECMACIDR to remove tttcHM
and drive the potion from the iriiem. L
"U1CH1CIM Of TBI IIIIM
run MiDHirua oi THI omiM"
At All Ilrafguu
Ju. Belly 4 Sea, Wholesale Dittribeton
IT
Boschee's Syrup
/B HAS been
" pTJfijf Relieving Coughs
for 59 Years
tmwm Carry a bottle in
your car and always keep it in the f
house. 30c and 90c af all druggists.
FOR OVER
200 YEARS
haarlem oil has 'xLa worldwide
remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
lumbago and uric acid conditions.
i
correct internal troubles, Stimulate vita!
organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist
on the original genuine Gold Medal.
'^THACHER'S
User and $k od%rup
Don't allow such a cood tka when you /,
ca? alleviate your di?co? .fort., prevent 0
constipation, cleanse yur liver and
P*M^lJ2?ldwmSe bottle at your
^ drumit, or writeThacl a Medicine
f*J> ChattuooulTcno.
s- iii r 1 r 1 ff iniiii' ill