The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, February 16, 1923, Image 2
HAIR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY “Hair Groom” Keeps Hair Combed—Well-Groomed. haSr|/^SK GROOM ( Ibn TKADC HAH** Uft , ' I Keeps Hair C £ Millions Use It—Fine for Hair!—Not Sticky, Greasy or Smelly. A few cents buys a jar of “Hair- Groom” at any drug store. Even stub born, unruly or shampooed hail stays combed all day in any style you like. “Hair-Groom” is a dignified combing cream which gives that natural gloss and well-groomed effect to your hair — that final touch to good dress both in business and on social occasions. Greaseless, stainless “Hair-Groom” does not show on the hair because it is absorbed by the scalp, therefore your hair remains so soft and pliable and so natural that no one can pos sibly tell you used it. It occasionally happens that a good debater proves his case when lie isn’t sure of it himself. GRANDMOTHER KNEW There Was Nothing So Good for Congestion and Colds as Mustard But the old-fashioned mustard plaster burned and blistered while it acted. Get the relief and help that mustard plasters gave, without the plaster and without the blister. Musterole does it. It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mus tard. It is scientifically prepared, so that it works wonders. Gently massage Musterole in with the finger-tips. See how quickly it brings re lief-how speedily the pain disappears. Try Musterole for sore throat, bron chitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it may prevent pneumonia). 35c and 65c, jars and tubes; hospital size, $3.00. Better than a mustard plaster On Another Track. "What’s become of the young men Edith used to have in her train?” “Oh, one by one they switched off.” Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION l\ ' INDJGESW^ Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans 25$ AND 75$ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Cough Following “FLU” Check it Today! WITH FOLEY’S HONEY# TAR £*tablUhsd ISTS BRIEF NEWS NOTES WHAT HAS OCCURRED DURING WEEK THROUGHOUT COUN TRY AND ABROAD EVENTS OFJMPORTANCE Gathered From All Parts Of The Globs And Told In Bhert Paragraph* Foreign— Princess Mary of England, wife of Viscount Lascelle, gave birth to a son in London on February 7th . It has been semi officially announced In London that British commanders have been instructed not to obey the Turkish demand that they evacuate the harbor, and are under strict oijflers to open fire if attacked. Rescuing parties are continuing the grim search for bodies of fifteen of the 40 mine workers who lost their lives in an explosion of fire damp in i tunnel of the Cumberland Coal Mines it Vancouver Island, B. C. The allies are standing firmly on their positions in regard to Smyrna, it was declared at the foreign office, and their small fleet there has been reinforced by the British cruiser Cura coa. Paris newspapers say that Franco is planning to double her efforts, hith erto blocked by German resistance, to restore the railroads of the Ruhr val ley to a satisfactory operating basis. French railroad workers to the num ber of 4,523 have been quietly assem bled, and will entrain for the affected district. The deatb| penalty will be inflicted on Germans caught tampering with railroad equipment or signal boxes or for other acts of sabotage endangering the lives of travelers, the French au thorities announce. This is the first threat of capital punishment made by Lhe occupying authorities. Sentries have been ordered to kill any persons approaching railroad crossings, tower hous s or stations and refusing to halt after the customary' challenge. Lieut. Walter Hinton, American avia tor, has arrived at Rio Janeiro, com pleting his seaplane flight from New York; to Rio do Janeiro. The water front and hilltops were crowded with thousands of peoplo who had waited several hours to witness the end of the long flight. The French army is on the march deeper into Germany with orders to break the dominant will of the Ger mans. The French claim that the rea son for this Is that the Germans had committed acts of sabotage, endanger ing the entire transcontinental rail road system. Demonstrations by unemployed ac tors in Paris, France, have caused the music halls to forbid German acts, but German music is as popular as ever at high class concerts. Washington— President Harding has prepared 'a statement to congress asking for ap proval of the British debt funding set tlement negotiated by the American and British debt commission. The administration measure, propos ing return of many millions of dollars worth of enemy alien property seized during the war ha 3 been formally ap proved by the house interstate com merce committee after it had been amended in many important particu lars. Congressional approval of the war debt funding agreement negotiated with Great Britain was requested by* Pres ident Harding as a “recommitment of the English-speaking world to the val idity of contract.” Coupled with this approval, the president added in an ad dress at a joint session of the senate and house, congress should enact into law the administration ship billl be cause “it is as important to avoid losses as it is to secure funds on debts.” Stocks of bituminous coal in storage in the United States, January 1, amounted to 36,000,000 tons, as com pared with 32,000,000 tons on Novem ber 1, and the federal fuel distributor believes that the danger of a bitumi nous coal famine this year has passed. Forming a special committee to greet the return of American soldiers from the Rhine, a large deltgation of congressmen and senators left Wash ington for Savannah, Ga., where the first consignment of troops will land. Although President Harding has de ferred sending of the British debt set tlement agreement to congress, Re publican leaders have gone ahead with plans for prompt action on the legisla tion necessary to give the agreement immediate effect. It is stated by a white House spokes man that President Harding’s adminis tration favors application of the prof its accruing from operation of the Pan ama canal to the construction of a new inter-oceanic waterway HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY, McDONOUGH, GEORGIA. The Aztec ruin, near the town of Aztec, N. M., donated to the govern ment by the American Museum of Nat ural History, is established as a na tional monument under a proclamation issued by President Harding. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon has asked the District of Columbia Supreme court to dismiss a suit brought by Mrs. Harriet A. Frothing ham, of Boston, attacking the consti tutionality of the Sheparu-Towner ma ternity law. A treaty of peace and amity, eleven conventions and three protocols were signed at the final plenary session of the Central American conference in the hall of the Americas at the Pan- American union. Secretary of State Hughes presided. While court judgments for more than twenty thousand dollars against the Southern Commercial congress havo been disclosed, it is denied that finan cial difficulties threaten the* organiza tion, and it is Btated it will short ly meet its obligations and proceed as it has for many years as a prominent agency for urging business prmotion in the South. Domestic— Congressman Henry Z. Osborne of Los Angeles, Calif., died at his home in that city the other day. Ho was serving his fourtth term in the house. Chester Carleton, an American no gro of San Diego, Calif., who shot and killed George Monteverde, member of the Mexican police force at Tiajuana, at the border town, was hanged in the Tiajuana jaR It is hot known whether ho was given a trial, toil of a terrific explosion in Mine No. 1 of the Phelps Dodge Corporation, two milos from Dawson, N. M. Res cue workers from Dawson and Raton are working feverishly in an almost vain effort to remove alive some of the 121 men caught in the blast. The last thousand American troops from tlio Rhine have arrived and dock ed at Savannah. The official welcom ing committee included Governor Hard wick of Georgia, Major General Farns worth, United States army, chief of infantry; Maj. Gen. David C. Shanks, United States army, commander of the fourth area; .a congressional commit tee from Washington. Officers and enraged citizens of northern Talladega county and western Calhoun county, Alabama, are scouring the countryside in search of a man who assaulted a 16-year-old white girl, cut her throat from ear to ear and hid the body of his victim in a clay pit within sight of her home three miles north east of Lincoln, Ala. Co-operative marketing is the great movement in America and the salvation of the agricultural industry of the country, declared Judge R. W. Bing ham, editor of the Louisville Courier- Journal and chairman of the National Co-operative Marketing council, in an address before the convention of the Southern Agricultural Workers at Mem phis, Tenn. Judge Bingham said that co-operative marketing is no longer an experiment, but that in twelve years of actual trial in all parte of the coun try it has not suffered a single failure. Charges that twenty-six girls, mem bers o| the House of David, at Ben ton Harbor, Mich., had been forced to marry men they did not love and who were selected for them by Ben jamin Purnell,, head of the sect, were made in an affidavit introduced in cir cuit court at Paw Paw, Mich., in an SSOO,OOO damage suit brought against Purnell by Ruth B. Reed and Gladys B. Hubei of Detroit. Possibility of extending cotton pro duction westward and northwestward, that a wider economic system is im perative if the South is to be the home land of a happy and contented people, and the warning that within the past few years the metropolis has drained the rural South of 750,000 population, were among the outstanding points brought out before the triple meeting of Southern agriculturalists, educators and extension workers held in Mem phis, Tenn. Chicago vendors of poison hootch, which is declared to have killed more than fifty persons in Chicago during January, will be sent to the penitenti ary for long terms if a bill soon to be introduced in the Illinois legislature be comes law. The bill is said to be spon sored by the proprietors of 400 non union printing concerns. Discovery of the skull and skeleton of a dinosaur, that roamed Asia five million years ago, has been made by a scientific expedition, officials of the American Museum of Natural History, New York City, announce. The dino saur ante-dated any species found in the United States, according to the au thorities. With twenty-seven persons unac counted for search continues for addi tional victims who may be buried be neath 12 feet of debris within the brick wall skeleton of the four-story Getto building, Wichita. Kans., recently con sumed by fire. The death toll stands at three, and eight persons were seri ously injured. Many received minor injuries. MANY WOMEN AVOID OPERATIONS Through the Use of Lydia E.Pinkham s Vegetable Compound Two Interesting Cases Some female troubles may through neglect reach a Btage when an oper ation is necessary. But most of the common ailments are not the surgical ones; they are not caused by serious displacements, tumors or growths,al though the symptoms may appear the same. When disturbing ailments first appear, take Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound to re lieve the present distress and pre vent more serious troubles. Many letters have been received from wo men who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound after operations have been advised by attending physicians. Mrs.Ed wards Avoids Operation Wilson, N. C.—“ For about a year I was not able to do anything, not even my housework, because of the pains in my sides and the bearing down pains. I could only lie around the house. The doctor said nothing but an operation would help me, but I tried different medicines which did Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon “ Ailments Peculiar to Women ” will be sent you free upon request. Writ© to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lyan, Massachusetts# This book contain valuable information. Motor Lawn Mower. A Britisli naval officer is the In ventor a motor-operated, ehain jriven lawn mower with adjustable ipeeds. A FEELING OF SECURITY You naturally feel secure when you j know that the medicine you are about to : take is absolutely pure and contains no harmful or habit producing drugs. Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root, kidney, liver and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength und excellence is maintained in every bot tle of Swamp-Root., It is scientifically compounded from vegetable herbs. It is not a stimulant and is taken in teaspoonfui doses. It is not recommended for everything. It is nature’s great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles. A sworn statement of purity is with every bottle of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root. If you need a medicine, you should have the best. On sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. ! Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample l bottle. When writing be sure 1 and mention this paper.—Advertisement. The Enchantment of Distance. She —I just love the farm! He —How long have you lived in the city? A single application of Roman Eye Bal sam on going to bed will prove its merit for Inflammations of the Byes, external and in ternal. Advertisement. Some men look as if they “would go as far as the next one”; and some don’t look it, but will. Don’t let child stay bilious, constipated MOTHER, YOUR CHILD’S BOWELS NEED “CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP” Even Cross, Feverish, Sick Children Love its Taste and it Never Fails to Empty Little Bowels If your child is listless, full of cold, has colic, or if the stomach is sour, breath bad, tongue coated, a teaspoon ful of “California Fig Syrup” will quickly "start liver and bowel action. In a few hours you can see for Four self how thoroughly it works the con stipation poison, sour bile and waste right out and you have a well, playful child again. no good, until my sister insisted on my trying Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. She said there was nothing like it I know that she was right, for I began to improve with the first bottle and it has done me more good than anything else. lam able now to do anything on the farm or in my home and I recommend it to my friends.”— Lillie Edwards, R.F.D. 3, Box 44, Wilson, N. C. Another Operation Avoided Akron, Ohio.—“ I can never praise Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound too highly for what it has done for me. I bad such pains and weak ness that the doctor told me nothing but an operation would help me. But my mother had taken the Vegetable Compound and she told me what it had done for her, and so I took it and I am glad to tell every one that it made me a strong woman, and I have had two children since then.”—Mrs. R. G. Westover, 325 Grant Street* Akron, Ohio. Wl".: v . H i ■ umiH r i j ] Instantßelief Aim /hr Whoopmsu»ush ifiES CtoupSr Color ll» Ikonc&alTnjiibief If tls-t $ is AVOID dropping ■VI I tqn I strong drugs In ■ * 1 * » I 11 eyes sore from Alkali or other Irritation. L y 0 The old simple remedy that brings comforting relief j I \/p, * s best. 25c, all druggists For SORE EYES PARKER’S HAIR balsam I R-S&plr RemovesDanaruff-StopsHairF&Ulng J,,v 'Jjfij Restores Color and B" ' Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair R toe. and SI.OO at Druggists. Chem. WkaPatchogne.W.X. HINDERCORNS Removes Corns, Cal louses. etc., stops all pain, enaures comfort to the feet, makes walking easy. 15a. by mall or at Drug gists. Hlsoox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. I. gIHTERSMITH’s P ©IUIbNIC SOLD SO YEARS A FINE GENERAL TONIC Millions of mothers keep “California Fig Syrup” handy. They know a tea spoonful today may save a sick child tomorrow. It never cramps or over acts. Ask your druggist for genuine “California Fig Syrup,” which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother, you must say “California” or you may get an Imitation tig syrup.