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The Hartwell Sun
—Established 1876
LEON MORRIS & LOUIE L. MORRIS
Editors Publishers Proprietors
Entered in the Post Office at Hartwell,
Ga., as Second Class Mail Matter.
Member
Georgia Press Association
Eighth District Press Association
National Editorial Association
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
Subscription Rates —In Advance
One Year .. $2.00
Six Months ..--
Three Months - -50
Foreign Advertising Representatives
in New York City: American Press
Association. 225 West 39th Street.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1924
* * * * * * * ’ * ♦
* SOME SUN *
* SCINTILLATIONS *
* L.L.M. *
*«*>*♦ *****
j V
A BIBLE THOUGHT J
For This Week ■■■ I
B Bible Thoughts memorized, will prove a t
priceless heritage in after years.
SEEK YE THE LORD while
may be found, call ye upon him while
he is near: let the wicked forsake his
way, and the unrighteous man his
thoughts: and let him return unto
the Lord, and he will have mercy
upon him; and to our God, for he
■will abundantly pardon—lsaiah 55:6,
7.
An acted lie is just as black as a
spoken one.
—... .—-fl- " ■ ' ■ "
A little bird on a hat is worth two
that tell tales.
o-
Some men look for work with
about as much enthusiasm as if they
were looking for a case of smallpox.
o -
They’re disputing whether Colum
bus was a Spaniard or an Italian,
We don’t care; he delivered the
.goods, all right.
Old Joe Jones says “Many Hart
well children miss good fairy tales
some nights by going to bt’d before
daddy conies home.”
Reed Creek’s agricultural display
won first place at both the Hart
County Fair and the Anderson
County (S. C.) Fair. We’re proud
of Reed Creek and her fine citizenry.
o
Very Timely.
The election came off on the 4th,
and on November sth President Cool
idge issued the Thanksgiving procla
mation. Coolidge has made a good
President and we do not fear for the
nation’s welfare under his guidance.
o
A New Meaning For U. S.
“Jim, I see that your mule has U.
S. branded on his right hind leg. I
suppose he was an army mule and
belonged to. Uncle Sam?”
“No suh. dat U. S. don’t mean
nothin’ ’bout no Uncle Samuel. Dat’s
jess a warnin’. Dat U. S. jess stand
fo’ Unsafe, dat’s all.”—Arkansas
Banker.
o -
The Biters Bitten
A couple of city motorists, riding
near a farm orchard, stopped the car,
got out, climbed the wall and gath
ered half a peck of rosy apples. To
complete the “joke” they slowed
down as they went by the farmhouse
and called out to the proprietor:
“We helped ourselves to your
apples, old man. Thought we’d tell
you.”
“Oh, that’s all right,” the farmer
called back, “I helped myself to your
tools while you were in the orchard.”
—Boston Transcript.
Good Time* In Georgia.
Judging from the whisperings
around, we are going to have a big
harvest of small grain in 1925, if sea
sons will permit. Why not? M e
have the soil and the men who are
capable of making the soil produce
by proper preparation and proper
cultivation. With a reasonable sup
ply of graiA, feedstuff and with the
activities of the club boys and girls,
for better hogs, finer chickens, larg
er corn yields, more peas, potatoes
and calves, we see no reason why
daybreak for better times is not near
at hand. Everybody get the tune of
progress.—Walton News.
Cotton in the Hail Storm Section i*
Making A Good Crop
(Southern Cultivation)
During the month of July we were
going from Hartwell, to Royston,
and passed through a section where
a severe hailstorm had devastated the
crops and the farmers were chopping
out their second planting of cotton.
We made mention of this section and
the conditions. This hailstorm came
about the 12th of June. The farmers
were uncertain what to do, but they
decided to try planting cotton again;
while we were over at Royston, Ga.,
on October 16th, we learned that
these farmers would gather a fair
crop of cotton. One farmer had
ginned a bale from this second plant
ing just exactly 120 days from the
day he began planting over. We pub
lish this instance, because these hail
storms visit some sections every year
and often the farmers do not know
what to do about planting over. If
you have as much as 120 days in
which to mature your cotton before
the time of a killing frost, you are
safe in planting the second time.
LOOKS DIFFERENT NOW
W. M. McCormick, Baltimore busi
ness man, has just returned from a
business trip to Europe and talks of
conditions abroad as he found them.
In looking through his interview one
I is particularly struck with this para-
I graph:
“There is not the least doubt that
I the greatest curse of England, Scot-
I land and Ireland is the excessive use
ol liquor. It is pitiful to see thou
sands of men and women drinking
together at bars, the women some
times with babies in their arms. After
the saloons close at 10 o’clock, these
people in a more or less intoxicated
condition go to their squalid homes,
made so by their lack of thrift and
the spending of their earnings in this
habit. A strong feeling is growing
among the people of Great Britain
that something must be done to stop
this habit or the Island will pay the
penalty.”
All this is naively written just as
if one had gone somewhere and seen
something that he never suspected
existed on this planet before. Yet
conditions paralleling those described
in England existed for decades in the
United States and particularly in the
large cities. It was, indeed, accept
ed by most of us as a matter of
course that people should spend their
time and their hard-earned wages in
filling their bellies with poisons and
shambling through life on the bare
necessities of existence. Since we
have put an end to such customs
there is no sensible person who does
not recognize that liquor has been
one of the worst moral and economic
curses ever suffered by this nation.
It only takes a visit to England and
other European countries to look at
ourselves in the mirror of history, as
it were, and to realize what a great
slough we lifted ourselves out of in
adopting prohibition.
And yet there are still some few
individuals who are suffering from
the hallucination that we are soon to
have a return to such conditions. —
Greenville News.
LOWDEN WILL SPEAK IN
ATLANTA ON NOV.I7TH
Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 12.—Arrange
ments have just been completed for
Honorable Frank O. Lowden, ex-
Governor of Illinois, and one of the
leading spirits in the co-operative
movement for marketing farm pro
ducts is this country, to speak in
Atlanta on “Co-operative Marketing
for Farm Products and the Progress
the Movement Is Making in This
Country,” on Monday, November 17.
Possibly no man has taken a great
er interest in co-operative marketing
during the past eighteen months than
the former Governor of Illinois, who,
on different occasions, was offered
the Ambassadorship to Great Britain
by President Harding, and the vice
presidential nomination by the Re
publican party. Although tendered
both of these honors, he refused them
mainly for the reason that he has
been actively engaged in getting the
wheat and cotton producers organized
into co-operative marketing associa
tions for selling their products.
JJnder his leadership as chairman
of the National Advisory Committee
for marketing wheat, a number of
the Midwestern States have already
formed co-operative associations for
marketing wheat. He is a member
of the Arkansas Cotton Growers Co
operative Association and market®
his crop annually, which consists of
several hundred bales of cotton,
through that association.
Governor Lowden is one of the
most forceful and eloquent speakers
in this country, and because of his
pro-found belief in co-operative mar
keting, the members of this associa
tion and others who will have op
portunity of hearing him will hear
one of the most able addresses ever
delivered on this subject in this State
when he speaks in Atlanta on Novem
ber 17th.
Religion
Our government rests upon reli
gion. It is from that Source that we
derive our reverence for truth and
justice, for quality and liberty, and
for the rights of mankind. The gov
ernment of a country -never gets
ahead of the religion of a country.
There is no way by which we can sub
stitute the authority of Taw for the
virtue of man. We can not depend
on government to do the work of
religion. We can not escape a per
sonal reponsibility for our conduct.
We can not regard those as wise or
safe counsellors in public affairs who
deny these principles and seek to
support the theory that society can
succeed when the individual fails.”—
Calvin Coolidge.
——o
A movement has been started at
Kentville, Nova Scotia, to erect a
■ monument in honor of Longfellow,
whose poem, “Evangeline,” has that
region for a setting.
—o
Judge Alfred J. Talley, of the
I Court of General Sessions in New
York City, while inducting into office
I a new jurist said, “One of the things
that you will come to learn is that
you have come on the bench of the
greastest criminal court in he world,
and the oldest court of any kind in
I the United States, at a time when
! this country is suffering under an
indictment which proclaims it to be
I the most lawless on earth. You will
find that the United States must
plead guilty to that indictment. Most
of the desperate criminals are mere
boys. You will be heartbroken at
discovering that the vast majority of
defendants are under nineteen or
twenty years old. That is going to be
your most distressing problem.”
QUESTIONS
and Bible Answers
3 If Parent* will aneoerage children to look up
|HI and memoriae the Bible Anawera. it will prove
g a priceless heritage u> them in after years.
What encouragement did the Lord
give Asa at the mouth of Azariah the
prophet? See Chron. 15:1-7.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., NOVEMBER 14, 1924
“FOR WHAT IT’S WORTH”
This is election day, as I write this
in far off Oklahoma. Election day
with its final decision to the various
candidates and respective parties.
After weeks of campaigning, speech
making, charges and counter-charges,
the -moke of battie will be lifted and
success or failure of each candidate
at last be finally decided. Many
candidates will at last found out for
themselves the sad and discouraging
truth, that many a voter does not
cast his ballot like he cheers. I have
often thought how nicely this thought
was expressed after a county election
in Hart county several years ago, by
a defeated candidate. This man had
been “cheered” on and encouraged
!by these false friends and at the
l closing of the polls, when he saw de
feat was enevitable—, miserable de
feat—, he was accosted by some
hanger-ons at the drug store, “Come
on, Tom, and buy your friends a
drink.” “Friends, did you say—, I
don’t know who they aire!” Regard
less of how the national election
comes out, I deeply, and earnestly
hope that today, in the states of Okla
homa and Texas, two candidates for
high offices in these respective states
will be completely and ignominiously
defeated. Their election would be
a disgrace to civilization; their de
feat would be a vindication of justice
and decency to every law abiding
citizen. I refer, in Oklahoma case,
to Jack Walton, former impeached
Governor of Oklahoma whose record
is as black as any imprisoned convict
and who is at present running for a
Senator’s place in Oklahoma. I re
fer, in Texas case, to Mrs. Ferguson,
whose only claims to Governor place
is, that she makes “good pies and
cakes” and that her husband, Jim
Ferguson was impeached and thrown
out of office as Governor of Texas,
for embezzlement and the blackest
of corrupters. These two races I
am deeply interested in. It is my
sincere wish, along with all other self
respectirrg people, that these two
candidates go down in humiliating
defeat.
With the coming of November, one
feels the splendor and all the appeal
of the winter season. Business takes
on new life, the hum of activity un
seats the idleness of lanquid summer
days, the fragrance of cool, crisp
days smiles us in the face and fills
our lungs with the tonic of determin
ation, there’s a holiday feeling in
the air. ’Tis winter. The trees are
shedding their last vestige of auburn
covered leaves, and the cool northern
A LITTLE FUN
Doe* He Short-Circuit?
He: “Here comes a friend of mine.
He’s a human dynamo.”
She: "Really?”
He: “Yes, everything he has on is
charged.”—Selected.
The Giftie
“Wha’ brand o’ bacca are ye
smokin’, Jock?”
“I dinna ask him!” —London By
stander.
Following Medicine
“I heard your son was an under
taker. I thought you said he was a
physician.”
“Not at all. I just said he followed
the medical profession.”—Selected.
—o,—
No Wbnder
First Steno —“The idea of your
working steady eight hours a day! I
would not think of such a thing!”
Second Steno —“Neither would I.
It was the boss that thought of it.”
—Wall Street Journal.
A Safe Retreat
First Business Man: “Calvin, there
are a couple of creditors close on my
heels.”
Second Ditto: “Quick, run into the
savings bank over there. Nobody will
think of looking for you there.”—
Foolscap.
Exceptions to Every Rule
“So you went after the job. I
thought you believed that the office
should seek the man?”
“I do, but this is a fat job, and I
was afraid it might get winded be
fore it reached me.”—Boston Tran
script.
To Avoid the Rust
“Last evening , sir, I distinctly
saw my daughter sitting in your lap.
What explanation have you to make?”
“I got here early, sir, before the
others.” —Exchange.
, o —,
• ?**•**«**
• LIBERTY HILL *
Rev. E. 0. Vickery dined with
Mrs. Nancy Richardson, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Heaton and
children spent last Saturday night
and Sunday with relatives in this
community.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Page and
children spent several days last week
with relatives in Anderson, S. C.,
and attended the fair.
Mr. Walter Vickery dined with
Mr. Beverley Shiflet Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Richardson
and children attended the birthday
dinner given at the home of Mrs.
Greewav Sunday.
Mrs'. Geo. S. Shiflet and daughter,
Miss Fannie spent last Tuesday with
Mr. and Mrs. Earley Shiflet of Cross
Roads.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Cordell and
children spent Saturday night and
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Earley
Reynolds.
the W. M. S. will have their regu
lar meeting at the church Saturday
p. m. 2:30 o’clock, every member is
urged to be present as it is time to
elect new officers. Let every mem
ber be there on time
I-.- - —... ' ■
In a western town there is a sign
reading as follows:
4076 people died last year of gas.
39 inhaled it.
37 put a ' gh‘.-J match to it.
4000 steppe ’ on it.
By E.8.8.Jr.
winds bring a forecast of approach
ing snows and the reign of winter.
Through it all, the holiday spirit
is most apparent. Far away as
i Christmas may seem, that is the goal
' that the fall months lead on to, as
their destination. That is the grand
climax, that is the culmination of
each glorious year. And through my
territory as I have traveled it in lei
surely fashion, the spirit of the sea
son has manifested itself in and in
creased volume of business, with the
purchasers happy in gifts for those
at home —, gifts for father and,
mother, “little sister” and the “real
girl” who waits somewhere the com
ing of vacation and her lover.
There are always two sides to
every question, of course. There are
those that would argue, for instance,
that this expensive habit of Christ- '
mas spending in the matter of gifts
is foolish and wantonly wrong. And
there are those that contend, on the
other hand, that the pleasure of giv
ing is worth all the expense and the
trouble attached to it; not unneces- |
sary expenditures nor useless giving
but a happy meduim —, gifts to our
immediate family and those close to
us. And yet there are those who
would ban all gifts; who would drain
Christmas of every joy; who would
lift the romance and sweetness out
of life itself. I think the most beauti
ful picture ever painted is the happi
ness of a child on Christmas morning.
Norman, OkJa., the seat of the
University of Oklahoma will be the
setting of many gay parties and much
celebrating this week. It is home
coming time for the University of
Oklahoma. The old grads will swarm
back in great numbers and there will
be much mingling and mixing of the
old alumni and the present student
body. It will be a happy time. Most
home-coming are, and, yet when
these old-timers come back they will
revel in old surroundings once more
and enjoy the memories of old days
but there will be something lacking
and something missing. It will be
the old faces who passed on and who
have scattered to parts unknown and
it will be the obliteration by the cruel
hand of Time of the old land-marks
and time honored customs. The old
timer, the real old-timer, never gets
used to the younger generation with
its modern ways and the old grad is
always a little awed by the present
day magnificance of college life as
compared to his days of simpler
living.
Hear And Their
By DANA
I KNEW her first.
* * ♦
BECAUSE OF her smile.
* ♦ ♦
AND HER eyes.
♦ * ♦
THAT WERE deep blue.
♦ * ♦
AND ENTRANCINGLY beautiful.
* * *
AND HER hair.
♦ ♦ *
THOUGH CURLINGLY bobbed.
♦ ♦ ♦
SPOKE SWEET poems.
♦ * ♦
TO UNBELIEVING folk.
* ♦ ♦
AND AT her switchboard.
♦ ♦ »
DAY IN and out.
♦ ♦ *
SHE ANSWERED caressingly.
♦ * ♦
ALL CALLS.
* ♦ ♦
AND SO we met.
* * ♦
THIS GIRLIE and I.
* ♦ ♦
AND WE talked seriously.
* ♦ ♦
OF MANY things.
♦ ♦ ♦
SUCH AS life.
» * *
AND HOPES and ambitions.
* ♦ ♦
AND PLANS and purposes.
♦ * ♦
AND I found her good.
♦ * ♦
AND SWEET and ambitious.
* * »
AND SO tonight.
* * *
AS I write this.
* * *
I’M GLAD to remember.
» ♦ »
THESE THINGS.
—♦ ♦ ♦
FOR TODAY at dusk.
* * *
WHILE RETURNING home.
♦ ♦ ♦
SHE WAS accidentally killed.
♦ ♦ ♦
BY' A speeding car.
» ♦ ♦
AND THERE’S nothing left.
♦ ♦ ♦
BUT HER memory.
♦ ♦ ♦
WHICH WILL live always.
♦ ♦ ♦
I THANK YOU.
o—
“Remember that talking is one of
the fine arts—the noblest, the most
important and the most difficult—
and that its fluent harmonies may
be spoiled by the intrusion of a sin
gle harsh "note.”—Oliver Wendell
Holmes.
- o
What is said to be a record yield
of strawberries for Pennsylvania has
been reported from Schuylkill county
where Elsie Artz, a thirteen-year-old
girl member of a strawberry-growing
club, raised 812 quarts of berries on
one-twentieth of an acre. This is
the equivalent of more than sixteen
thousand quarts an acre.
Wellborn Tells Os
Advantages Gained
By Marketing Crops
Below is an extract from address
of M. B. Wellborn, Governor of Fed
era! Reserve Bank of Atlanta, before
the Georgia Agricultural Society at
Savannah recently:
Just a few words now about co
operative marketing. Within the
past few years, the farmers have felt
the necessity of organizing them
selves into mutual associations for
the purpose of effecting a more or
derly and business-like disposal of
their products. This movement has
gathered strength, and now all of
the cotton states have their separate
organizations which are taking an
increasingly larger part in the'proper
handling of our commodities. The
banking interests in the cities are
giving them ample support, and we
of the Federal Reserve are render
ing them all of the assistance at our
command, and will continue to give
them our wholehearted co-operation
at all times. There are, of course,
certain serious difficulties to be
overcome. As matters stand now,
a multitude of individual producers I
are still competing disastrously with
each other, thus destroying opportun
ities for a fair and just profit to
those who have risked their capital
and labor on the fitful and uncertain
element of the weather, upon which
the prosperity of agriculture must
necessarily depend to a very large
extent. For the success of the co
operative associations, other things
than a full membership are necessary.
The best available talent for the work
in hand must be obtained, and to this
end adequate salaries must be paid.
Otherwise, the organizations will fall
into the hands'of mediocre ability,
where the entire movement would
lanquish and eventually die. While
the principle of co-operative market
ing is sound, there are two factors
which might cause its failure. These
are: (1) A lack of sufficient mem
bership to make its work effective,
and (2) Mismanagement. On the
whole, however, I believe that the
creation of these Associations is
the most practical step forward ever
taken by the farmers, and, since
their success means so much to the
basic welfare of our industry, all the
banks, both in the city and in the
country, should put aside any sel
fish or petty objections, and give the
movement their whole-hearted and
sympathetic support. By so doing,
they not only better the lot of the
farmers, but contribute directly to
the prosperity of their communities,
and, indirectly, they are working for
their own success. To use a Biblical
phrase, bread which they cast upon
the waters now will be returned to
them a thousand fold in the not dis
tant future.
MISS JANE DUNCAN
Miss Jane Duncan, 80 years of age,
died at the home of her brother, Mr.
G. W. Duncan, in Bethany community
Wednesday, November 5, 1924, and
iwas buried on the 7th in the ceme
tery at Bethany Baptist church, fol
lowing appropriate service conducted
'by Rev. A. W. Bussey, of Bowman.
The deceased was born in South
! Carolina, but had made her home for
'some time with her brother near
Hartwell. She was well known to
many people in the county who will
regret to learn of her passing.
i Miss Duncan was a member of the
Baptist church, her membership being
at Belton, S. C.
She was ill only two days, paralysis
being the cause of her death.
Surviving are two brothers, Mr.
G. W. Duncan, of Hart county, and
Mr. Newton Duncan, of Anderson
county, S. C., and one sister, Miss
Nancy Duncan, of South Carolina.
Funeral arrangements were under
the direction of Mr. W. C. Page, of
Hartwell.
o
COMMUNITY PRODUCTION
SOLVES SEED PROBLEM
An adequate supply of pure plant
ing seed of standard cotton varieties
is the fundamental ' requirement of
the cotton industry, to replace the
mixed “gin run” stocks now gener
ally grown, says the Georgia State
College of Agriculture. A general
investigation of the breeding and
utilization of superior varieties of
cotton has shown that pure seed can
be produced only in communities
that limit themselves to one variety.
Remarkable results have been se
cured on the community plan of one
variety production at Winterville in
Clarke county and Reed Creek in
Hart county during the past two
years, and in 1924 twelve communi
ties were organized on this basis.
Five hundred acres of College No.l
cotton was grown in the Reed Creek
community this year and all of the
seed sold for planting purpose. In
every community following the one
variety plan, a pure seed association
has been organized which handles all
of the sales and purchases of seed
on a co-operative basis.
Under the community production
system the mixing of seed and the
consequent running out of varieties
are avoided, production is based on
pure seed, superior qualities are
utilized, better cultural methods are
adopted, greater efficiency in pro
duction is secured, and commercial
advantages are obtained from the
marketing of a uniform product.
Information on the one-variety
community method of cotton pro
duction, including the selection of a
variety, the maintenance of seed
stocks and the organization of new
centers of seed supply may be ob
tained by writing the State College
of Agriculture at Athens, or the
United States Department of Agri
culture, Washington.
o -
Man attracts attention only at his
birth, at his wedding and at his
funeral. Three times and out, as it
were.
afterevery
Cleanses month and
teeth and aids digestion. !
Relieves that over- S
eaten feeling and acid iH
mouth.
Its 1-a-s-t-i-n-g flavor ww
satisfies the craving for Kl
Sweets.
Wrigley’s is double H '
value in the benefit and H
pleasure it provides.
Seeded in ite Parity 1
The city of Cohoes, New York, is
building houses for sale to its citi
zens.
Old aches
n
\ 'Mr?
"Mr
mi - w >
Comforted at last
No matter how obstinate, long
standing and acute, Sloan’s
gives quick positive relief. Pat
it on gently. At once you feel a
glowing warmth as freshly puri
fied blood is sent tingling through,
the infected spot. Then —in no
time —release from pain. All
druggists—3s cents.
Sloan's Liniment— kills pain!
Some men are born with black
eyes and some have to fight for
them.
Pine Tar and Honey
Still Best for Chest
Colds and Coughs
Our mothers and grandmothers
Would never be without pine tar
syrup in. the house for coughs,
chest colds, etc. This was many
years ago, but modern medicine has
never been able to improve on this
time-tested remedy. Doctors say
the pine tar is hard to beat for
quickly loosening and removing the
phlegm and congestion that are the
actual cause of the cough. At the
same time pine tar and honey soon
soothe and heal all irritation and
soreness.
The kind that has been used witV
never-failing- success in thousands of
families for years is that known as Dr.
Bell’s Pine-Tar Honey. This is scien- j
tifically compounded of just the right 1
proportions of pine tar, honey and other
quick-acting, healing ingredients which
the best doctors have found to aid in
quick relief It contains absolutely no
opiates, narcotics or harmful drugs, so
can be given to young children —fine for
spasmodic croup. It tastes good. too. If
you want the best, a medicine that often
stops the severest cough overnight, bo
sure you get Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar Honey.
It coats only 30c at any good druggist’s.
Pure, white flawless diamonds, cut 1
on American standards, can be pur
chased in Russia at SIOO a carat. (
The difficulty lies in getting them out
of Russia on account of the Soviet
ban.
HOW DOCTORS IREAT
COLDS MO THE Fill
To break up a cold over night or to cut
short an attack of grippe, influenza or sore
throat, physicians and druggists are pow
recommending Calotabs, the nausealess
Calomel tablet, that is purified from dan
gerous and sickening effects. Those " c
have tried it say that it acts like rca^ :t -
far more effective and certain than ,?‘
style calomel, heretofore recommended
physicians. . . >
One or two Calotabs at bed time
a swallow of water, —that's all. N'> s a
no nausea nor the slightest intern r 1 n --
with eating, work or pleasures. Next n.orn
ing your cold has vanished and your j-;,-
tem feels refreshed and purified. Ca
are sold only in original sealed pact .-•£ •
price ten cents for the vest-pocket ■---
thirty-five cents for the large family lac
age. Recommended and guaranteed c.
druggists. Y’our money back if you are no
delighted.—adv.
Georges Clemenceau is now i'ing
in a tiny house in Vendee, anc ’
and does his own marketing. He ® '
gages in literary work and passe? n ’
days in his garden among his -
and trees. He will not discuss poi
A Good Tning - DON’T MIS- IT-
Send your name and address P l ?*';’;
written together with 5 <* nls ( an
slip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co.,
Moines, lowa, and receive in re-”.’ .
trial package containing Chamber.*, n
Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup,
bronchial, ‘flu” and whooping cougu-.
and tickling throat; Chamberlain s -•
ach and Liver Tablets for . stomach •
bles, indigestion, gassy pains that c
the heart, biliousness and ’
Chamberlain's Salve, needed in r ’ a
family for burns, scalds, wounds P“
and skin affections; these valued s ■ •
medicines for only 5 ceaU. -von t r— 2,1 ”