About The Athens daily herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1912-1923 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1923)
TOW 1TOBNB. CX. BANNBli FRIDAY. JANlUitv .. , THE BANNER-HERALD ATHENS, GA. Publlihed'Every Sunday Morning by The Athens Publishing Company. Athens. Ga. ^ ..' .. .. — Publisher and General Manager Managing Editor .consolidation of the Sunday Isauexol the Athens Herald and the Entered a tthe Athena .PnatoHice as Second Clans Act of Congress March 8, 1879. Mail Matter under Member pf the Audit Bureau. . MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this.pa per, ul j also the local news published herein. All rights of repu lication of special dispatches are -also reserved. "t 4 * >• Andrew O. Erwin, Bowdre Phiniry, H. J. Rowe, Secretary and Treasurer. Vice-President ATHENS PUBLISHING CO., ATHENS, GA, address,all Business Communications direct to the Athena Publishing ,1° ' Company, not to individuals. Newe articles intended for publica- tion should be addressed to The Banner-Herald. DAILY '• SERMONETTE Take with you these words, and turn to the Lord.—Hosea 14:2. % That the spirit of man should entertain htipes and anticipa tions beyond what it actually knows and can verify, is quite natural. Human life could not jiave the scope, the depth and progress' it has, were this oth erwise.—iMatthew Arnold: • ' ATHENS 27 YEARS AGO Tt«n« of Interest in the Classic City as Gleaned from Old Piles of the Banner. Berton Braley’s Daily Poem POSSIBILITIES (From Files of 1895.) ROBBINS ARB HERE The small boy and the parlor rifle will soon go out together af ter the redbreasted robin, for the advance guard of our winter visi tors are here, and they are pre sumably testing out the various chinaberry trees and spotting the Itenderest wheat fields for the 'regular army to camp on during 1 their stay. Bobbin pie will be the 1 regular dinner dish for some time jnow, and no better dish than it >can be served. W. r- . ^ ( • your moods : xt .Now,often do your moods change? And what makes them ■ change? The liver and digestive system have,a lot to do with it. Many a ffay’af happiness is ruined by a morsel of food. The. chief reason 'people talk so much about the weather is, not because - weather helps or interferes with their plans, but because it is so powerful at governing their moods. Difficult, to explain how the .weather can affect the mind or “spirits”—unless you concede, With,Cone, that we arc slaves of our imaginations. Under a cer- ... tain set of circumstances, you find yourself happy and care- ■ free, provided the weather is bright and sunny. Under identically the same circumstances, when it's raining or the sky leaden and I .overcast, most ofi us are gloomy, languid and make mountains out j of molehills. Writers of stage , melodrama follow this .psychology. Trouble sadness and forebodings are unfolded before a back ground of mournful winds and viciously swirling rain. The last ‘:,..Mt,,the happy ending, usually takes place witji the sun-shining • 4' and,everybody full of pep and joy except the villain. Our endocrine glands—particularly the thyroid and adrenals .r-ralso have powerful control over our emotion or moods. These little bodies, by excessive or deficient secretion of chemicals, can -J make, the glands’ unfortunate owner melancholy almost to the point of insanity, terrified .into near-hysteria, or as exhilarated ns if .the glands were secreting essence of John Barleycorn. Peo- ,ple with violent emotions often are merely the victims of dis eased glands. a , ,. i. ■ After .ail, what a wonderful thing it is, that our moods ctn)nge go abruptly and completely! A happy life is a life of con- . leasts, with joy and displeasure balancing or off-setting each .other, 'Take a youngster wjth an.appetite for candy that seem ingly cannot be satisfied. Put him to work in a candy store. -'Come.back jnm year and you’ll find,himmore .interested in bread / and butter than in candy. With an. .unlimited supply of sweets before him, he has no contrast such as' he had when sweets were fti^ta luxury. The contrast absent, he loses interest. Joy ceases to ^ be joy when it is constant diet. Occasional troubles and disap pointments make joy stand out as a desirable contrast.- So we appreciate. happiness when we have it. Too much happiness is a poison. In downcast moments we sit' back, take stock of our- aelvos, analyze our condition, make new resolutions—in general, . fountain ,our perspective on Ufa If we didn’t fall off the horse now and then, we’d soon become so confident .and arroganl about i*.pur riding ability that it’s-be .next to impossible for any one to “.*• T< > understand your moods.and to keep them from dpwnipg,you, remember r we .are slaves to^the Law of Contrasts, W|th a. change always inevitable later. If- I could go To some place where the tropic breezes blow. And where I need not ever fret and labor, Striving to wax a* v/calthy as my neighbor; I President Bradwell of the Nor- Imal School will move his family to Athens today. souvenirs qf some celebrated c bats whereat an Athens rooster conquered his South Carolina op ponent and won several hundred dollars for the proud sportive Athenian breeder. The, only chick en fights that occur in Athens now is the natural combats between the Shanghai lords of adjoining back yards, but of these fights the small boy takes great delight in relating the merit of the vari ous victors, and several persons, church-going, Christian Athenians, are the unconscious possessors of several “fighters” that have the admiration of the small boy sporting fraternity of the city. KEMfS OF ATHENS ID THIS COUNTY If I could And A haven from the cares that vex my mind. And placidly exist in peace and plenty. The perfect,.type of “dolce far niente;” With bright birds singing in the branches gaily, While dusky maidens thrummed the ukulele; )f I could lie Drowsy and idle ’ncath an azure sky . Away from all the hurry and the, bustle With never need to work or to hustle; ATHENIANS QUIT SPORT Several years ago Athens used to have some of the very best known breeds of game cocks. They were entered in the pits held at Augusta and Columbia, S. C., every year and never failed to win money for their backers. The craze seems to have died out com pletely in our city, all that remains ETpv martin amorous and <ms .figs - Something of a real constructive nature has been undertaken ,by Mri-Martin Amorous, well known Cobb county planter, who is $h9rou*Wy convinced of North Georgia's adaptability to the 'v 1 Droduction of a.nnilifip vnrietv nf flora fVinf kn Vi a a j:. Could I discover Seme spot where lazy magic seems to hover In all the air and nature’s slum brous beauty Made me forget ambition work and duty— . of the sporting life, are several rusty old gaffs that are kept as Bradberry’s district elected two democratic bailiffs last Wednes day. That shows a pretty substan- til democratic gain in that distrief that cast only on?* democratic vote in 1892. The tax rate of Athens is only 1.10 per cent and the city has no specific tax on any business that can be reached by ad valorem tax ation. No other city of like size in Georgia can make such a show ing. DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU? ▲ Little of Everything And Not Much of Anything. By HUGH ROWE By u T. LARRY GANTT : Yesterday 1 took my regular* weekly round over town and chat tered with the merchants, I found them to a man enthused over the Farmers* Conference, to begin Its session January 22nd, and say* they will give it all the aid in’ their powep. The general belief is that this gathering must result in great benefit to the farmers, like wise to merchants, for 'the inter ests of both are entwined. Du ring the week it is expected that Athens will be filled with visitors from not only this section but from all over the state. It is sug gested that our merchants put on a bargain sale week and give the visitors an opportunity to lay in their supplies. By each bouse se lecting some special article, our city can draw a large crowd and do a fine business during^ the week. Talullah Falls and other points. Mr. Hancock says some counties below must b(ty corn this year, but sections above and immediately around Athens have made plenty of grain to do them and many fanners are selling corn. .His firm is paying $1.05 a .bushel. Mr. Han cock says from what he can learn fanners will go to work with the right spirit this year, and with a good crop “troubled times will be over.” He says business has sta bilized and his. house is doing a fine trade. PREPARING FOR THE WHITE. WAY New Elixir, Called pironal, Medicated Latest Scientific r dies, Used And Endi Sur secnsl If I should fare Forth to a place like that devoid of care / 1 would be happy for a little while, Loafing about my little lazy isle; THAT— Life Is what we make it After all has been said and done there is little to get out of life unless we live as we should and ’ treat with our fellow man as we would have him treat with us. It is bet ter not to say anything of him unless something good can be said. The good things should be said in life and not after death. Words of encouragement some times mean the turning point to success for a man who is discour aged and feels the weight of ad versities; criticisms sometimes mean the downfall of the man who is successful. Did the thought ever occur to you But wouldn’t T, ‘1 1 Before a lot of time had drifted by, Sicken and pine for struggle and for strife, And for the t°il and trouble of this life? Perhaps I would—I can’t be sure about it, But—well, I doubt it (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service) Harding Is Still Confined to Room - . tBWdflClwn, of * prolific variety of figs that he has offered to dis- ttil>ote,ifree: of. charge, a number of cuttings of a very excellent -• Wie$S»,.evolved .by himself. • #r..AluoiW,pian is explained;in detail in the following com- , r jnunication from him: . . ■fc. *T have cultivated and-developed an exceptional variety of “ MY and suitable to the North Georgia climate. It is yi-proliflc, bearing three full crops this year. Large size, very few 7 under two ounces. Purple color and delicious flavor. I have "’.nanrftdtit ,‘H,Amorosose.’ - <-“I-have just bedded some cuttings and they should be ready Blaijt,in AjJril. Having had many rcauests.to.buy these cut- have, decided to distribute them on the following condi- tipjis. .Cobb county folks to.have preference—one to a family as long;xs they. last. Each ’buyer’ must agree to deliver to me or . my,heirs, one ripe fig from each crop grown on these trees and any .and. all. other trees grown from these cuttings or cuttings made.from their trees. By this method of marketing, I wish to illustrate that people can ‘buy’ and ‘sell’ commodities that pro- , —\vide.a living to man, without using money in the exchange of one ;W n ’ s product wjth another. »* ‘fit will also build a monument to me witohut bronze or mar ble, and be more enduring. r .... “Applications will (be filed in regular order as recevied, and • _ -“.filled as long as they last, or. next year. I will furnish full printed ■ : directions for planting and growing.” WASHINGTON —. President Harding, who several days ago contracted a touch of the grippe, was expected to remain away from his officcY again Friday on the advice of his. physician. Gen eral Sawyer. The president was said to have rested "reasonably well” Thursday and Thursday night. Board' to Act In Powell’s Refusal to Admit Negro Boy NEW YORK — President Laururee Lowell, of Harvard member of the board of over seers to call a special meeting of University has been requested by the board to consider the presi dent’s ..action in refusing admit tance to freshman hall to a son of Roscoe Conkling Bruce, negro graduate, according .to the New York World. The paper stated that it had ascertained positively that such a request had been made but that no overseer who wa: reached would verify the report. r HM . ; REVIVING RECOLLECTIONS OF COLLEGE pyr-*' •. jilFE n . . befofe .he was inaugurated governor of Alabama at ^Montgumery Monday, William W. Brandon waa p. 1 a diamond hadra hv thn ai-l. -n « i. r. «. T*' ”* “ u “ ,uu “ presented with - a diamond badge by the Styna Alpha Epsilon, his college fra- ___.teraity through governor-eleet Clifford M. Walker of Georgia, ^vriio was a fellow member. When Mr. Walker becomes ’ Governor j.'Walker next June, Governor Brandon will perform a similar ser- 1 ‘.vice for Georgia’s new executive. —. v'"; ■ badges are bestowed in recognition of years of service to the fraternity, a member if the 1 Supreme Council of E. A. E. _ said to the Associated Fress , representative at Baltimore, in an- , ; ■ nouneing the plans for the presentation. Governor Brandon serv- as eminent supreme archon fer two terms and the present honorary eminent supreme archen. The fraternity boasts of thc membershlp of many men high in the public life of the State and nation, conspicuous among • whom was the late President William McKinley, who was pre sented with a diamond fraternity pin upon his inauguration as . Governor of Ohio. ■ ; Such pleasing amenities recall many delightful recollections of :r*. college life. A number of Georgia governors have been members of the S. A. E., but none has enjoyed the double distinction of ;w~j having a diamond studded badge presented to him When inau- —- gurated, and this will fall to the lot of Governor-eleet Walker. England last year had'63 murders—and arrested 56 persons, charged with murder. Hard for an American to believe. One American in 12,000 leaves this, life at the hands of a murdreer. In England the figure is only one in 634,000. In America anyone can buy a revolver. In England a pistol can be bought only by presenting a police permit—and. such permits are not issued to private parties. Since the majority.of murders are committed by firearms, it’s perfectly obvious why, in proportion to population, „ we have 53 times as many murders as England. idence and respect as an impar tial jurist, and one whose decisi ons are seldom reversed by the higher courts. ’His rulings in Clarke Superior court this week, and his action in throwing out* cases which had been hanging fire for court after court without any reasonable cause has met with the general endorsement or the. public. Cases where no witnesses or attorneys appeared and di vorce cases where the principals did not appear were dismissed. This action on the part of Judge fFortson not onW saves time for the trial of cases which are im portant, but such disposition of v— these cases saves thousands Jamea"Whitcomb RUey baa this (dollars to the taf payers of this to supply the demand. _ to say on the subject of: Icouhty In cost of conduct of the (past they make, strictly a high — I /<nnrt nnd thn ruin imnrc>ssp« those CMflf* furtilivAk Tho nrino will I asked Mr. Morton Hodgson and>Mr. Geo. H. .Hulme ibout che white Way. supply' of calcium arsenate, Mr. i Hodgson says the Hodgson Cot-1 CITY ton Co., Barrett & Co., and G. H. NOTES Hulme have done all possible to get poison enough for their cus tomers and he thinks, they will be able to supply the gauntry tri butary to Athens. But it is best farmers to lay in a supply as soon as possible, or they may fin^. the stock exhausted. Mr. Hodgson says that Athens is selling this nelson for less than it cpn be hr,nglit in New York. They have so;nc on hand that they sell for 17 certs per pound ar. I can g<* i* .?eul3 in New York. It new :<y.'ks a®; if # the price will ' be around 18 or 19 cents. Mr. Hulme says they have limited supply, Barn it & Co., sell the Hill Mix ture and for which great demand. I asked Mr. Hodgson about fer- tlizers. He sakl their company counted on sales abput the same as last season and have enough Like the Our merchants are making pre parations to celebrate the open- ins of ti e white Way and will Jjy European and make it a night long to be remem- bered in Athens. The cafes will put f*o big pot in the little one and set feasts before their patrons Manager Swilling, manager of the Palm Garden, says on that occa sion his popular resort will* excel all former efforts. He intends to have every visitor in our city visit them. He is already at work pre paring tempting dishes and new delicious leverages. The mer chants will decorate their stores and offer special bargains. The movies will have good reels. It will be made a great occasion. It is proposed to crown Mike Costa king of the night in recognition *of his service in getting up the Cold, ican Army Cut Short Cough Due to Prevent Complicatl Every Druggist in Instructed to Price While You Counter if You C; Fegl Relief Co Within Two .Minutel Delightful Taste, diate Relief, Warm-Up. The Wier Grocery Co., is build ing up a fine trade and say they are determined on having one of the neatest and cleanest places in Georgia. The Cofer Seed Company gettingin their stock and will be ready for the spring trade. This is another new Athens enterprise. Mr. Sol Boley is having a large and modern display window put in and making other improve ments to his store. Attractive new signs are being put up and our business section brightened for spring, j Two of our prominent dry goods is a 4 houses will combine, so it is re- | ported. News of The Day LET SOMETHING UOOD Bt SAID” When over the lair fame of frien-J or foe The shadow of disgrace shall fall; Instead Of words of blame, or proof of so and so, _ . v Let something good be said. Forget not that no fellow-betas yet May fall below but love may lift his head; Even the cheek of shame with tears is wet, v If something good is sai<V. . court and the rule impresses those interested in such cases that they must be ready for trial or elsethey some good legal excuse why the cases should be continued. His ac tion was wise and proper and will receive the endorsement of the tax payers of the county. No generous heart may vainly turn aside In ways of sympathy; no sqpl so {But may awaken strong and glori fled, If something good is said? And so I charge ye, by the thorny And by the cross on which the Savior. bled. And by your own soul's hope for fain renown. Let something good be Said. THAT— Judge Blanton F°rtson has suc ceeded in becoming one of the most popular and able jurists in the state. In every, county in the Western circuit has proved fiimself one of the most popular ^udges who has ever presided over this circuit and among the lawyers as well as among the people he has endeared himself to them and gained their confl* last year. Germany Sends Mission to England Asking Mediation. OIL PRICES JUMP THAT— The campaign to be inaugurated by the officers of the Y. M. C. A. next week for the purpose of se curing in subscriptions a suffici ent amount for the maintenance of that institution for the ensuing year should be entered into with whole heart and soul by the peo ple of this community. The cause is mCst deserving; the institution is one of the cAty.’s greatest as sets. No community can grow and prosper without a Y. M. C. A. and tha$ organization should have. N the moral support of the people'of the city as well as their financial support. No business can succeed without money and it requires money to operate this ^reat plant as^ much so as it re quires money to operate any com mercial enterprse. The comint- tees will be out next week. These men at*e giving their time t? the cause, many of them business men who ,are burdened with their own affairs, but they are cheer fully giving their time to this work for the good the association is doing for the boys, young men and older men. When they call on you for a subscription, do not and haw, hut help them by making a ready response in* order that they may continue their can vass with as little delay as possi ble—Thank you. iMr. Morton Hodgson showed me a letter and copy of an«.advertise- ment forwarded hi3 company by the Bank of Manhattan Co., of New York, one of the strongest in America, with a capital and sur plus of $22,000,000. This bank is doing some splendid work on the South in advertising on prosperity and resources of our section in great financial and other papers. In Its advertisement of Georgia it is shown that in one year our state produced 5,000,000 bushels of potatoes, 1,500,000 bales of cotton, 4.000,000 bushels of peanuts and its agriculture products alone was worth more than a half billion dol lars. It also shows the growth of our banks. Italian Troops Will Not Replace U. S. on Rhine. _ The sensation in the drug is Aspironal, the quick ' and cough reliever, authorit ly guaranteed by the labor tested, approeti and most iastically endorsed by the authorities, and prodaraed common nennle as ten ti quick and effective ’hs \ rock and rye or any other they have ever tried. All drug stores are now sui with the wohderfqj new elb step into the nearest drug hand the clerk half a dollar bottle of Aspironal and tell serve you two !:easpoonfula. your watch in y.iur hand, t drink at one swallow and your money back in two *f you cannot. feel relief witjun the time limit. I bashful, for all druggists you and expect you to Everybody’s doing it. Take the remainder of t! tie home to your wife and for Aspironal is by far the and most effective, the take and the most agreeable and cough remedy for infami easier. | NGW YQRK —lieutenant Alex Pcnrst n and Bridle/ ."ones flew frjm Dayton, Ohta, to New York, ta I’-'isr -hours and three minutes, ng the record to • that dis tance. DALLAS, T-?.cas — l’riccs of Crude oil in Kansas. Oklahoma • n T Texas were advnflc*.d by the Magnolia Petroleum company five cents a barrel on oils under 28 dtf'j grees gravity and tefi cents a bar rel above 28 degrees gravity. CELLULOID BEADS Celluloid beads in blended col-, ors are being used as trimming for spring hats. , Owing to the composition of which they are made, the hat does not* become heavy no matter how many are used, Very novel effects are achieved through their , use. “Feeling i» COLORS FOR SPRING Everything points to the unre strained use ot color during the spring and summer season. At Palm Beach and the winter re sorts. at all daytime as well aa evening atfairs, brilliant reds. , ins, blues and figured material i are u4ed. White is the fad. of the ' 1 & i "I was pale and thin, hardly able to go,” says Mrs. Bessie Bearden, of Central, S:C. ‘‘iwoutdsuffer,when t stood dn my feet, with bearing-down pains in my sides and the lower part af , my body. I did not rest well j) and,didn’t want anything to hour. 1 eat. 1 felt miserable. A ; friend of mine told' me of No more Rheumatism Epps garage and aviation field has just received*a second flying machine aad which is now being put together. By early spring they will add it to their fleet,and this will give Athens two flyers for probability is that the. Govern ment will establish an aviation ground near the Winterville road and which will be quite an enter prise for Athens. This field will then be kept up by the govern ment, mapped out and passing flyers will us^ it. Besides the mail air route. ' It is one of the best aviation fields between Washington and Atlanta. " Every fair Sunday flight:’- are taken from our aviation field and en- joyecl by many citizens. A flyer can be hired at Athens fo^. any air trip desired. / NEW YORK — New life insur ance paid for last year by the American people totalled $6,383,- 415,87 as against $5,687,417,359 in 1921, it was announced by the I Association of life insurance presi dents. LONDON—Germany is sending confidential mission to London to request the British government to meditate between France and Oerhiany a dispatch Said. adults. I SEVERE COUGH AFTER INFLUENZA “After an attack of the *1 which left me with a severe o nothing: seemed to relieve i til I used Foley's Honey and I writes Mrs. K. D. Drake, CR Maryland. Coughs resulting fr Influenza, Whooping Cough, A ma, Croup, La Grippe. and B chitis are quickly * relieved ; Foley’s Honey-and Tar. no opiates—ingredients p the wrapper. Largest cough medicine in the World. S everywhere.—(Advertistment) ] -j STOMACH MISERY, GAS, INDIGESTIO WASHINGTON — French occu pation of the Ruhr may be ex pected to temporarily promote iron and steel trade in the Unit ed States. Great Britain and Bel gium, Luther Becker, Chief of the iron and Steel division of the de partment of commerce announc ed. Mr. Hancock of the Webb Gro- rrry Co., tells me that they are shipping corn from Athens to CINCINNATI,; Ohio — A work ing agreement making possible the re-union of the two factions of the Methodist Episcopal church j was agreed to by commissioners representing the Methodist tepisco pal church and tho Methodist Episcopal church South.‘ WHO IS THE UGLIEST MAN IN ATHENS? DRAWFUNNIES Drawings By Bill Holman. Verses By Hal Cochran. PUFF SLEEVES The short poff sleeve is seen ji ^ on ^fashionable frocks, particular-« ^ ly those of. taffeta. Slashed puffs * f are seen on soipe of/the^pictures- que frocks that copy old cos- \ tumes. y 1 S. S. S. Is the Great Builder of Red- Blood-Cells and Rheumatism Must Gol Just Try It! The Woman’s Tonic A Puzzle A Day PNLLEEEESSSSS A word in the English language can be formed from the letera' shown above. Can.'.you' discover the word? and I then remembered my mother used to take it... ■ Alter the first bottle 1 was better. 1 began tofleshen up and I regained my strength and gooff, healthy color. I feeling fine. I took twelve bottles (of Cardui) YESTERDAY’S ANSWER r: M E A G . Ri E E A G L E S A G H AST Q L A N _C E Thousands of other women have had similar ex periences in the use of Cardui, which has brought relief where'other medicines , had failed. Try Cardui. It may be just what you need. R E S C U t E S T E E M EX 92 “Rheumatism? Me? No, iedeed, Ifi ill gone, every bit of It! It’s lun- k|lno and joy for me now tec the first True in yean. I feci a wonderful glory again In the free motion I need to have when my days were, yonnger.; I look at my hands and think of the twlata and aweUlngs they used to have. I bend way over to the floor. I haven't been, able to do that In many yean. I can thank 8. 8. 8. for it all! To me it waa a rlaXig eon of joy and lib erty. Brothen and • liters in misery, do -not close yonr eyea and think that health, free motion and strength are gone from yon forever! It la not so. It la here and now for all of yon. S. S. S. Is waiting to help yon.” There la a reason why 8. S. S. will help yon. When yon Increase the number of yonr red-blood cella, the entire ays- tem undergoes a tremendous change. Everything depends on blood-strength. Blood which Is minus sufficient red- cells leads to a lodg list of troubles. Rheumatism Is one of them. 8. 8. 8. is the’ great blood-cleanser, blood- builder, system strengthened nerve ln- vlgorator. . It stops skin eruptions, too, pimples, blackheads, sene, bolls. Li Ij j “Pape’s Diapepsin” Correc | Sour, Upset Stomachs ; at Once “Pape’s Diapepsin” is the q est, surest relief for indiges gases, flatulence, heartburn, i ness, fermentation or stomach! tress caused by acidity, tablets ’ give almost immed stomach relief. Correct your * ach and digestion now for a J cents. Druggists sell millions ^ packages.—(Advertisement.) at v* > FOR B0I1 To clean out your bowels ’• out cramping or overacting, Cascarets. Sick headac he, bill nhss, gases, indigestion, sow, set stomach, and all such dism gone by morning. Nicest P“ on earth for grown-ups and dren. 10c a box. Taste hw dy.—(Advertisement.) Tho above- completed word square is made up of six differ ent words, which read the- same mt top are meagre, WHO IS THE UGLIEST MAN IN ATHENS? eczema. It bnUds up run down. 1 men and/Vromen, beautifies complex ions. makes the flesh firmer. Start 8. S. S. today. It is sold at all drug. stores in two sizes. Tho larger size} bottle Is the mor* economical. MEDIUM BROWN HATR looks eagles, aghast, glance, rescue, and j best of all after a Golden Glint esteem, ^ ^ | Shampoo. ' , like yourteJf aqam :■ ■ ' <7 <r This janitor is on the job, With broom that’s like a rake. He cleans up all the messiness >usines3 men all make. ;dr BELL'S -TarHonej sGt& Quiets Coc$ufcGiedist The most 8tnbbom, coughs cannot survive aJew of Dr. Bell's—that ^ood oW-* remedy. There is« the very first teetpocw— "-n. i lng ptne-tar-honey coinpoM>a, w* heals the raw 6 pots-loo.en», the ccngh. Pleasant to take! CT{efu5e substitute*! ELL'*