Newspaper Page Text
BRACE UP!
The man or woman with weak kid¬
neys is half crippled. A lame, stiff back,
with its constant, dull ache and sharp,
shooting twinges, makes the simplest
task a burden. Headaches, dizzy spells,
urinary disorders and an "all worn out’’
feeling are daily sources of distress.
Don’t neglect kidney weakness and risk
grave], dropsy or Bright’s Kidney' disease. They Get
a bos of Doan’s Pills.
have helped other people the world
over. Ask your neighbor!
A Georgia Case Har¬
Mrs J. F.
per. Crowder St I
Barnesvllle, tj. Ga..
says. "I had a
pain in my back
ferfVy ■* and my kidneys
W 4',Y were heavy and
sLggish. I had se
, , vere headaches
.^4; md all my unstrung. nerves
ijgE? were
I was irritable
an< I dizzy too and
r j my kidneys didn’t
r \•' •*»*, act as they
rf —***.-.- >« should. Doan’s
Kjdney pills had
done so much good for others that I
began taking them. They entirely
cured me ”
Get Doan’j »t Any Store, 60c a Bo*
DOAN’S Vl&V
FOSTER--MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
A Solo Part.
Paula—I had a charming call from
Sir. Jollyboy last night.
Slay—What did he talk about?
Paula—Why. he just sat.ayd listened
to me. lie never opened his month.
ASK FOR “DIAMOND DYES”
Don't Buy a Poor Dye That Fades,
Streaks or Ruins Material.
• Each package of "Diamond Dyes”
contains directions so simple that any
woman can diamond-dye a new, rich,
fadeless color into worn, shabby gar¬
ments, draperies, coverings, whether
wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods.
Buy “Diamond Dyes"—no other kind
—then perfect results are guaranteed
even if you have never dyed before.
Druggist has color card.—Adv.
Not Nowadays.
“Would you say that two can live
as cheap as one?”
“Not at present prices.”
Indeed, It Did.
“So they wanted a boy, and it was
a girl.”
“Yes, it came a-mlss.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOIUA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
i Bears the
Signature of (
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
The wise merchant knows that it Is
the women who shop today and buy
tomorrow. tl wtft il
For the man who can pay for it with
honestly acquired coin the best is not
too good.
99 OUT OF 100
Of the little Ills and hurts, such as
Toothache, nervous Headache, or sore¬
ness anywhere may be quickly relieved
by applying Vacher-Balm, which Is
harmless. Keep it handy, and avoid
Imitations.
If you cannot buy Vacher-Balm lo¬
cally, send. 30c In stamps for a tube,
to E. W. Vacher, Inc., New Orleans,
La.—Adv.
The hand of folly is responsible for
quite a number of black eyes.
Honest men do what they can; dis¬
honest men do whom they can.
To abort a cold
and prevent com*
plications, take
alotabs
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain¬
ed and unproved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
After you eat—always use
EATON YOUR STOMACH’S 1C sAkQ
—one or two tablets—eat Kke candy.
Instantly relieves H eart bum. Bloated
food Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion,
the souring, miseries repeating, caused headacheand by
many
Acid-Stomach
EATONIC is the best remedy, it takes
the harmful acids and gases right out
of the body and, of course, you get
well. Tens of thousands wonderfully
benefited. Guaranteed to«3tisfy or
I tnoney refunded by your own drug¬
gist. Cost a trifltf. Please try it I
MEXIC PRESIDENT
IS ASSASSINATED
ASSASSINS ATTACK CARRANZA
WHILE.ASLEEP AND HACK
BODY WITH MACHETES
REBELS DISAVOW KNOWLEDGE
Revolutionary Leaders Seem Stupe¬
fied By The Tragedy, Fearing Its
Effect On The U. S.
Mexico City.—The dead and. reports
say, mutilated bodies of Venustiano
and those of his faithful followers as¬
sassinated" with him, have cast a pall
of wbrry and uncertainty over the cap¬
ital. *•
Vigorously gesticulating, the revo¬
lutionary leaders disclaim any and all
responsibility for the brutal act that
resulted in the first chief’s death at
Tlaxacalantongo. The most, detailed
information is being prepared for dis¬
patch to the American state depart¬
ment, showing that revolutionary
forces were nowhere near the Car¬
ranza fugitives when the slaying oc¬
curred. And it is likely that Gen¬
erals Gonzales and Obregon will deal
summarily with Gen. Rodolpo Herre
ro, who, according to present advices,
was the man responsible for the whole¬
sale assassinations.
While details of the assassination
are still lacking, the dispatches, in¬
cluding an apparently authoritative
version telegraphed to El Universal
from Beristan, would indicate that the
first chief and his faithful followers
were murdered while they slept, and,
gthe killings, the bodies of the
were slashed with machetes.
As to the whereabouts of Herrero,
differ. One report says he is
at Villa Juarez, under sur¬
until the revolutionary gov¬
has completed an inquiry in¬
the murders. A second declares he
in full flight with the revolutionary
in pursuit.
General Aguilar, another of the Car¬
followers, is reported to have
at Vera Cruz and receiv¬
permission to embark on a ship
Europe.
Evidences of sorrow in many quar¬
ters at the death of the first chief
manifested by flags at half mast
people calling at the Carranza
home during the day. The foreign
including those at the Amer¬
ican embassy, paid their respects to
dead chieftain both in calls and in
lowered flags over the embassies.
MOB OF ONE THOUSAND
PERSONS ROUTED NEAR
CITY OF WASHINGTON, D. C.
Mob Wanted Negro Who Had Killed
Man And Attacked His
Fiancee
Washington.—Cavalry from Fort
Meyer was called out to disperse a
mob of more than one thousand per¬
sons which surrounded the jail at Al¬
exandria court house, twelve miles
from the limits of the District of Co¬
lumbia, attempting to obtain posses
sion of William Turner, a negro.
Arrival of the cavalry, which had
been requested by the sheriff of Ar¬
lington county, scattered the mob,
which had formed during the after¬
noon. threatening to lynch the negro
The troopers took lip their station
aboutthe jail and the little village at
last reports was reported quiet.
Turner has confessed that he shot
and killed T. Morgan Moore and at¬
tempted to attack Moore’s fiancee,
Miss Pearl Clark, secretary to eRpre
sentative Fred Britten, of Illinois, af¬
ter holding them up on the road.
Miss Clark is ill at her home in
Washington, suffering from shock and
from the injuries sustained at the
hands of the negro, who snatched jew¬
els from her and ran awayfi after
having dragged her by the throat for
some ninety feet.
According to the police, the negro
held up the couple, who • were driv¬
ing in an automobile, with the demand,
“Give me a dollar!” Upon Moore’s re
-fusal, he threatened to kill him. Miss
Clark leaped from the car, the negro
rushed after her, and Moore, seizing
a revolver from a door pocket of the
machine, fired at him. One of the
bullets struck Turner's right leg and
another his right hand.
Lawyers Offer $2,500 For Bergdoll
Washington.—Twenty-five hundred
dollars reward for the capture of Gro
ver Cleveland Bergdoll, escape draft
dodger, was offered by Bergdoll’s at
torneys. The offer was made follow¬
ing a conference of the attorneys here.
The war department made public a
letter quoting Ansell with saying: “I
stand responsible for Bergdoll’s
prompt return to prison,” this being
written when the firm of Ansell &
Bailey was making arrangements with
the war department for Bergdoll’s
release to recover hidden money.
Bishop Perry’s Story Of Navy Methods
Washington.—Secretary Daniels tes¬
tified before a naval board investigat¬
ing methods employed in an attempt
to suppress vice at the Newport train¬
ing station that he obtained his first
knowledge of alleged misconduct on
the part of the navy personnel from
Bishop Perry of Rhode Island. Mr.
Daniels said he was shocked at the
allegations presented last September
by the bishop in asking that the de¬
partment apologize td Rev. Samuel M.
Kent, an Episcopal minister.
THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTON, GEORGIA.
GREAT PRICE-CUTTING WAVE
Washington Hears That Buying Fub
lie Is In Rebellion All Over
The Country
Chicago.—A wave of price cutting
in retail clothing costs reaching from
the Mississippi valley to the Pacific
coast is reported. Dispatches from
twenty-four cities in that territory told
of promised reductions in these ne¬
cessities ranging from 15 per cyut to
minus profit.
Financial authorities here said indi¬
cations were the price decline would
be limited to ready-to-wear clothing,
principally women’s garments and
silks. Shoes were in the list affected.
Tight money and inadequate trans¬
portation facilities were cited among
the prime reasons for the mercantile
movement. Delays in delivery of
goods in which much money had been
tied up, together with inability of the
farmers to get grain and live stock
to market were said in many instances
to have worked a hardship on mer¬
chants.
An officer of one of' the leading
department stores of Chicago declar¬
ed that the price reduction now be¬
ing reported meant also that mer¬
chants were trying to satisfy what
he ealledx“a hysterical demand from
the public for low prices.” These
current reductions, he said, might be
only temporary.
A financial authority here said that
if reports of price cutting were de¬
pendable, they indicated a tendency to¬
ward a reduction in inventories.
Though this might be temporary, he
said, it wa sundoubtedly good, in that
it suggested that merchants were go¬
ing ahead more cautiously. Sales
are being held under various names.
lit Topeka, KaSs., a men’s clothing
firm announced a “no-profit” sale, de¬
claring it would back its promise at
Lhe end of the sale by letting the
fair price commissioner or a commit¬
tee named by him take possession of
its books an daccounts.
Twenty per cent cuts were the most
popular. On the Pacific coast, Taco¬
ma dealers announced cuts from 20
per cent flat to “profitless sales.”
“YOU ARE A LIAR,”
SOUTHERN MEN
CRIED AT MADDEN
Illinois Congressman Called Confeder¬
ates Traitors—Personal Clash
Threatened
Washington.—Repetition by Repre¬
sentative Madden, Republican,' of Illi¬
nois, in the house, of his assertion
recently, that Confederates were “trai¬
tors,” threatened a clash between him
and Southern members, who gave the
“lie” to his epithet*.
Representative Stedman, Democrat,
of North Carolina, a Confederate vet¬
eran, had told the house that Mr.
Madden’s remarks would win the Illi¬
nois member “neither renown nor
happiness,” and would be disapproved
by a majority of the people of the
country, and Mr. Madden arose to re¬
ply.
Declaring that he had no apology
for his utterance that the Confeder¬
ates were “traitors” because they at¬
tempted to destroy the Union, Mr.
Madden repeated it, and then asked:
“Does anyone deny it?”
Instantly the house was in an up¬
roar, several Southern members an¬
swering his question affirmatively, and
others shouting, “Y'ou are a liar.”
As the shouts of the Southerners
were quieted, Mr. Madden again re¬
peated his epithet, and Representative
Romjue, Democrat, of Missouri, arose
from his seat, starting toward Madden,
as also did Representative Johnson,
Democrat, of Mississippi. Both stop¬
ped short, and Madden, turning toward
the Democratic side of the house, said:
“They were traitors, you say no, and I
say yes. They did try to destroy
the Union.”
American Aviator Missing In Poland
Warsaw, Poland.—Lieut. Harmon C.
Rorison of Wilmington, N. C., a pilot
in the Kosciusgo aerial squadron, has
been missing for several days, when
he begam a flight undertaken to obtain
a report concerning the Bolshevik
lines on the southern front in the
Ukraine. Since the start on his mis¬
sion, Rorison has not been reported,
and the Polish military authorities are
of the opinion that he either was shot
down by the enemy or forced to land
inside the Bolshevik lines.
Poison Gas Saves Funds Of A Bank
Knoxville, Tenn.—Poison gas, auto¬
matically liberated inside the bank
vault as a result of manipulations of
burglars, possibly prevented the theft
of several thousand dollars in the
Newmarket Bank at Jefferson City,
Tenn. The burglars secured about a
thousand dollars in cash, war savings
stamps, liberty bonds, postage stamps
and other valuable papers, but the
bulk of the cash remained untouched.
Finger prints on the wall are believ¬
ed to have been made by one of
the burglars
Urged To Modify Immigration Laws
New York—Temporary modifica¬
tion of the immigration laws to per¬
mit an influx of desirable immigrants
to meet America’s labor shortage, was
urged here by United States Senator
Walter E. Edge, of New Jersey, in an
address before the National Manufac¬
turers’ association. He also advocat¬
ed a process of Americanization to
prevent new immigrants from falling
under the spell of “world wide anarch¬
ists and bolshevists. Immigrants
should be “saturated with American
invaltv and patriotism.”
WILSON EXPECTED
TO VETO MEASURE
HOUSE ADOPTS KNOX RESOLD
TION TO END STATE
OF WAR
WILL NOT PASS^ OVER VETO
With Exception Of Nineteen - Demo¬
cratic Votes. Action Was Along
Strict Party Lines
Washington.—With the passage of
the Knox peace resolution by the
#
house after a stormy debate, the con¬
gress of the United States has put
itself on record declaring this country,
to be at peace with both Germany
and Austria-Hungary, repealing all
wartime legislation, and reserving all
rights accuring to the United States
under the armistice and the treaty of
Versailles.
The resolution, approved in the sen¬
ate, 43 to 38, and in the house by
a vote of 228 to 139, now goes to the
president. His avowed purpose, ac¬
cording to all administration lead¬
ers, is not only, to veto it, but to send
it hack to the capitol accompanied by
a scathing indictment of the Republi¬
can congress, charging interference
with executive functions and failure
to take up needed reconstruction leg¬
islation.
The vote was along strict party
lines, except that nineteen Democrats
joined Republicans in supporting the
measure, while two Republicans—Kel-j
ly of Michigan and Fuller of Mas¬
sachusetts-opposed it.
From the size of the Republican vote
it was clearly indicated that the res¬
olution could not he passed over the
veto of the president. The senate vote
on passage was 43 to 38.
The house total lacked seventeen
votes of the two-thirds necessary to
override the veto. Seven Democratts,
against the measure, which was a sub¬
stitute for the house resolution, were
paired with Republicans favoring it.
Two Independents also set off each
other in the vote — Representative
Carss of Minnesota, opposing the res¬
olution and Representative Keller of
the same state favoring it.
VILLA THREATENS
NEW MEXIC REGIME
WITH REVOLUTlOf
Man Who Has Defied Every Govern¬
ment Since Fall Of Madero Not
Ready To Yield Yet
Washington.—Francisco Y T illa, who
has defied every government in Mex¬
ico since the overthrow of Madero,
already has become an embarrass¬
ment to officials of the new de facto
forces.
A report to the state department
that Villa had captured and was hold¬
ing for fifty thousand dollars ransom
Georgia Miller. British, superintendent
of the Alvarado Mining and Milling
company, at Parral, Chihuahua, follow¬
ing a report that General Calles had
failed to obtain from the outlaw lead¬
ed an unconditional promise, of co-op¬
eration, is somewhat disconcerting.
A. J. McQuarters of New Y'ork, pres¬
ident of the mining company, sought
the advice of government officials re¬
garding payment of the ransom. The
state department, it is understood,
has taken no action, although it was
regarded probable that representations
would • he made, not to the authori¬
ties at Mexico City, but to the de
facto leaders in Chihuahua.
Representatives here of the revolu¬
tionary government said they doubt¬
ed the report that a ransom had been
asked for Miller’s release and called
attention to the repeated seizure by
Villa of Americans since the beginning
of the year and their subsequent re¬
lease. His action was explained by
statements attributed to Villa that he
was following the course most likely
to provide him the most up-to-date
news and a means of transmitting his
own ideas to some one on the out¬
side.
The dispatch of Rafael Zubaran to
Chihuahua was regarded here as a
move toward further effort to bring
Villa into the revolutionary movement.
Neither official nor unofficial reports
indicated that the authorities at Mex¬
ico City had carried out their implied
threat to force payment of the export
taxes due from the oil companies.
Price Cutting Affects Food Market
New v ork.—Influenced by the na¬
tion-wide price-cutting agitation that
is steadily. gaining ground, the princi¬
pal commodity markets of the coun¬
try continued to “mstrk down’’ quoted
values. Cotton, sugar and corn op¬
tions broke violently here and in Chi¬
cago, and cereals and provisions, in¬
cluding pork, also suffered sharp re¬
actions. Significance was attached to
the drop in the pork prices as mark¬
ing the first pronounced break in
high-priced foodstuffs.
White And Negroes In Big Battle
Fayetteville, N. C.—One white man
was killed and another mortally wound¬
ed in a clash between whites and ne¬
groes here following an attempt by
officers to arrest a negro, who, it was
said, caused considerable disturbance
after his daughter was arrested on
the charge of assaulting a young white
woman. The party of officers was
fired on in the negro settlement and
H. G. Butler was killed and a deputy
sheriff mortally wounded. A call was
sent the governor for troops.
LEGION’S PLANjS APPROVED
Move To Strike Real Estate And To¬
bacco Taxes Defeated Very
Decisively
Washington.—House Republicans, in
party caucus, came out squarely for
enactment of soldier relief as advo
cated by the American Legion.
Before deciding in favxir of the leg¬
islation, the Republicans refused, 141
to 49, to postpone indefinitely all ac¬
tion on relief legislation. All Repub¬
lican leaders, including a majority of
members of the steering committee,
were said to have supported the mo¬
tion, but there was no record vote.
The only record vote of the caucus
wa sthe defeat, 95 to 78, of a motion
by Representative Wood of Indiana
to strike out the provision to carry
out the Lane-Mondell plan for settle¬
ment and reclamation of western
lands.
The action of the Republicans was
taken after a four-hour fight in which
opponents of relief legislation declared
the country could not stand added tax¬
es, as made necessary by the bill. Sec¬
retary Houston’s letter, opposing any
bonus, sent to Chairman Fordney, of
the ways and means committee, was
not presented to the meeting, although
copies were circulated among mem¬
bers.
The relief plan of the American Le¬
gion contemplates four provisions, a
cash bonus, home and farm aid, paid
up insurance and vocational educa¬
tion.
Each veteran would he given the
choice of any one of these.
A motion by “Uncle Joe” Cannon
to strike out of the real estate and to¬
bacco taxes in the bill w r as defeated.
108 to 47. Caustic remarks on the
cash bonus feature preceded final ac¬
tion.
The vote on the motion presented
by Mr. Fordney for approval of the
relief bill was 116 to 39, the support¬
ers of the measure comprising less
than one-half of the tota^ Republican
membership of the house. Leaders
explained that the vote did not bind
Republicans individually to vote for
the bonus.
TWO OR THREE THOUSAND
ALABAMA COAL MINERS ARE
REPORTED TO HAVE QUIT
The Collective Bargaining Principle
Seems To Be The Main issue
Contended For
Birmingham, Ala.—Between two and
three thousand men have quit work in
widely separated sections of the Ala¬
bama coal mining district. Mining
has been suspended at a number of
points.
Brookwood and Searles mines of
the Alabama company, in Tuscaloosa,
are down and upwards of seven hun¬
dred men are idle there.
Pipe mines Nos. 1 and 2 in Bibb
county, operated by the Little Ca
haba Coal company, are also idle, with
more than 800 men out.
The mines of the Roden Coal com¬
pany, at Marvel, in Bibb county, have
been idle now for more than'a #veek.
with nearly 400 men out.
Coleanor mine, also in Bibb county,
is idle by reason of the strike, up¬
wards of 1,240 men being out.
Several other mines are reported
down.
J. R. Kennamer, president of the
Alabama district No. 20, United Mine
Workers of America, announces that
a number of mining corporations of
Alabama have signed contracts with
their men along the lines mapped out
by the union, but that others have
not, and there are probabilities of con¬
siderable unrest in the district.
<_arge Profits On Soft Coal Inhibited
Washington.—Cost of production and
prices of bituminous coal \vere the
subjects of a report by the federal
trade commission and of a letter writ¬
ten by J. D. A. Morrow, vice presi-.
dent of the National Coal Association,
to Senator Walsh of Masaschusetts,
both recently made public. The for¬
mer compared factors entering in coal
costs last February with the average
for 1918, while the latter denied Sena¬
tor Walsh’s contention as made in a
recent senate speech that the bitumi¬
nous coal industry made large profits
during the war. The commission re¬
port showed labor costs increased 29c,
cost of supplies advanced 2c and gen¬
eral expenses 8c per ton between 1918
and last February.
In Patched Suit, Senator Pleads Thrift
/
Washington.—Frankly confiding to
his colleagues that the clothes on his
back were threadbare and patched,
Senator Thomas, Democrat of Colo¬
rado, joining in another senate broad¬
side on profiteers, declared the people
themselves and not legislation must
break through the sweeping wave of
high prices. Linking the overall
movement, started as a protest against
the cost of clothing, with widespread
price reductions, reported from many
cities, Senator Thomas said the pub¬
lic had the remedy in its own hands.
Not To Bury Baccy With “Old Booze”
Washington.—Members of the To¬
bacco Merchants’ association of the
United States, in convention here,
have been assured by President C.
J. Eisenlohr, Philadelphia, that tobac¬
co and liquor would not be buried in
the same grave. He said there was
not the slightest basis for fear that
use of tobacco would be prohibited.
“Tobacco does not excite or intoxicate,
but it soothes and pacifies,” Mr. Ei¬
senlohr said, “and promotes sober de¬
liberation and moral contentment.”
MOTHER*
^California Syrup of Figs’*
Child’s Best Laxative
-----— ..... “I riga
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most harm¬
less physic for the little stomach, liver
and bowels. Children love its fruity
taste. Full directions on each bottle.
You must say “California.”—Adv.
The Milkman’s Error.
Guy Oyster, the brilliant secretary
of Samuel Gompers, said in a recent
interview:
“I personally, in this time of un¬
derproduction, am against strikes.
Strikes are a good thing, but you can
have too much of a good thing, as the
milkman remarked when he found
that he’d spoiled his milk by put¬
ting too much milk-preservative in it."
ASPIRIN INTRODUCED
BY “BAYER” IN 1900
Look for name “Bayer” on the tablets,
then you need never
worry.
If you want the true, world-famous
Aspirin, as prescribed by physicians
for over eighteen years, you must ask
for “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.”
The “Bayer Cross” is stamped on
each tablet and appears on each pack¬
age for your protection against imi¬
tations.
In each package-of “Bayer Tablets
of Aspirin” are saTe and proper direc¬
tions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia,
Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism,
Lumbago, Neuritis, and for Pain in
general.
Handy tin boxes containing 12 tablets
cost but a few cents. Druggists also
sell larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin
Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacn
tnre of Monoaeeticacidester of Salley
licacid.—Adv.
Hoarding and Wasting.
Great as is the sin to hoard treas¬
ure, it is no greater than to squander
them. Waste brings woe. It is of the
essence of well-doing to “economize.”
Unfaithfulness stands as its own wit¬
ness against a man. The Lord intrusts
us with this world's goods that his
cause may not suffer. — Reformed
Church Messenger.
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There is
znly one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness,
and that is by a constitutional remedy.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE acts
through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces
of the System. Catarrhal Deafness is
caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube is inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and
when it is entirely closed, Deafness is tho
result. Unless the inflammation can he re¬
duced and this tube restored to its nor¬
mal condition, hearing may be destroyed
forever. Many cases of Deafness are
chused by Catarrh, which is an inflamed
condition of the Mucous Surfaces.
ONE-HUNDRED DOLLARS for any
case of catarrhal deafness that cannot
be cured by HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE.
All druggists 75. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Requires Brains.
A certain Englishman, famous for
his erudition, played such a wretched
game on the links that he remarked
one’ day to his caddie: “How is it
that I, a man acquainted with all the
arts and sciences, cannot play this
confounded" game of golf?” like
“Weel,” said the caddie, “it’s
this—ye ken a’ ahoot they sinal’ af¬
fairs, an’ wit’ things connectit wl
them, but we maun understan’ that It
tak’s a heid to play gowf.” Boston
Transcript.
Important to all Women
Readers of this Pap«
Thousands upon thousands of
have kidney or bladder trouble and new
suspect it. , tj.
Women’s complaints often prove
nothing else but kidney trouble, c
result of kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy
dition, they may cause the other org
to become diseased. back, . .a.
You may suffer pain in the
ache and loss of ambition. .
Poor health makes you nervous. 1
ble and may be despondent; it mase..
Kilmer’s But hundreds Swamp-Root, of women .daim by thai: ^ ”.
proved to m u u jt
health to the kidneys,
the remedy needed to overco
conditions. sample hot t0 ( ee
Many send for a dne y (
what Swamp-Root, the (}o foj
liver and bladder medicine, wi pj,
them. By enclosing ten cen =■ r0U
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, *" rcd
may receive sample size bottle an( J
Post. You can purchase drug sto A< jv.
large size bottles at all
At the Circus.
star’s foa *
“I call your woman _
mendous.” “Naturally; she
from Chicago.”
blushes wonuu ‘ "P 1
When a man a
to wonder whe^ier he’s a