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Here is a treat that can’t
be beat! Benefit and plea
sure in generous measure!
- Gl4O
. Peppermint Flavor
B eeimieniens
A new set will assure easier
winter starting—better
performance —save oil
and gas.
Stop at your local dealer’s
and he will supply you with
a set of the correct type of
Champions for your car.
Champion X=—
exclusively for 60c
Fords = packed
fn the Red Box Bach , @
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" Champion—for
cars other than 75c
Fords — packed
wm in the Blue Box Each
C Dependable for Every Engine
Toledo. Ohio
AGENTS—CANVASSERS
DISTRIBUTORS
for fast-seliing general household necessity,
also to sell to drug, grocery and hardware
stores. One who will take the sole agency
for his district and can also engage a crew
of agents to sell the article from house to
house for the purpose of advertising it for
his district, grocery, hardware and drug
stores, Communicate at once with the
IDEAL SPECIALTY CO., 154 Lincoln Street,
Jersey City, N. J.
*11? /
Use Bevill’s Corn and
Eczema Lotion
to remove Corns wjthout making feet sore,
cures toe-itch in one night. Guaranteed to
cure Eczema in any form or any skin dis
ease. Sold i{n all leading Drug Stores in
three sizes 25c, 50c and SI.OO. If your Drug
gist cannot supply you, mail orders are
promptly filled. Write J. H. BEVILL, 706
Becond Avenue., Birmingham, Ala.
gOIN EXCHANGE CLUB Unique now. We
e'n you exchange property, articles, etc.
$: monthly. $3 semi. $5 annually, P. O.
Box 2012, Los Angeles, Calif.
LADIES—We pay S2O a hundred gllding‘
gards. Opportunity for beginners. No selling.
Addressed envelope brings particulars. UNI- ‘
VERSAL CARD, 186 William St., New York. |
- WE PAY YOU CASH (S Sager
crowns, false teeth, old Blaws.diargonds. maigeto
points. WHITING GOLD REFINING CO., 96 Kifth
eva. NEW YORK. Send goods now. References:
¢ Chatham-Phenix Bank. New York.
Suggestive
“Did Jack say anything about my
eomplexion 7’
“Yes, but he referred to it as your
¢olor scheme.”
ORANGE BREAD
2 eggs 1 level tsp. salt
%% cup sugar 4 level tsp. Calumet
11-3 cups mik baking powder
4 cups flour 1 cup candied or
-34 cup shortening ange- peel.
Cut the shortening into sifted dry
fngredients. Add the milk to the well
beaten eggs. Mix with the dry ingredi
ents and beat well. Add the candied
orange peel. Bake in a moderate oven
850 degrees F. for 50 minutes.
Only Thing
- “How are those new bumpers?”
“Fine; I bumped two cars already
and never got a scratch.”
Sure Relief
TN\ \
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k 2 I T "‘gLGCENfS
N\
ON@E) > 6 BeLLans
et~ = Sure Relief
Bt
DELL-ANS
' 25¢ and 75¢ Pkg’s.Sold Everywhere
B e . T T et
W. N. 4, ATLANTA, NO. 42--1926.
o e A e A e T
HUSBAND MURDERS
WIFE WITH AX AS
KISS IS SCORNED
Killed in Bed Because
Spouse Objected to Her
Going Out Nights.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—Because his attrac
tive wife had found other interests
and refused to remain home at night,
Antonio di Palo, twenty-seven, a la
borer, killed her in bed with an ax,
he confessed to police of the Wilson
avenue station, Brooklyn.
The murder was committed while
the four young children of the couple
slept in an adjoining room, and was
discovered by them when they rushed
into their mother’s room shouting for
breakfast. Their screams brought
neighbors, who found Mrs, di Palo
with her head almost severed and her
body mutilated.
According to neighbors, Mr. and
Mrs. di Palo had quarreled recently
because the pretty young wife dressed
In her best and went out nights. She
took in sewing and told her husband
she was using her own money.
Kiss Is Scorned.
The night before the tragedy, ac
cording ‘to her children, she prepared
their dinner, left her husband’s on the
stove and went to the movies. She
returned at eleven o'clock, her hus-’
band told police, and he asked:
“Rose, don't you care for me any
more?”
She gave him an abrupt answer, he
said, and they went to bed. At six
o’'clock Di Palo awoke and tried to
kiss her. She refused him with &
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Killed Her With an Ax.
curse, he sdid. He got the ax from
behind the bathtub and killed her. He
then dressed in his best -clothing
and left the house.
Di Palo, employed by the Insulation
company of York and French streets,
Brooklyn, is described by neighbors
as a hard-working and family-loving
man. 3
Lost Mothers, Children,
Found Praying in Forest
East Douglas, Mass.—Kneeling ln}
prayer, two women and three children
who had been lost in dense woods
were found huddled under a tree early
in the day. They had been lost for
twelve hours and were four miles
from where they had entered the
woods.
They were Mrs. Louis Chabot of
Whitinsville, her two children, Louis
and Joseph, aged nine and ten re
spectively, and Mrs. Chabot’s sister
in-law, Mrs. Adelard Chabot, and her
nine-year-old daughter. )
l The missing party was found by
| one of a posse of over 100 men who
had answered a call for assistance
l when it became known that the wom
en and children were lost.
Boy, Five, Bites the Dog ;
I¥s “Whale of a Yarn”
Pittsburgh.—*“lf a dog bites a man,
that’s not news, but if a man bites a
dog, that’s a whale of a story,” says
the reporters’ text book.
Anyhow, Thomas McGinley, five
Iyears old, son of County Detective
*James McGinley, simply “fought fire
| with fire,” when his pet police dog
snapped at him,
As a result, the dog became a pa
tient of a veterinary surgeon. A piece
was bitten out of one ear.
The boy was treated by a physiclan
| for minor injuriec.
l Unused in 32 Years,
Jail Is Torn Dowr
Yellowstone Park, Wyo.—The Yel
lowstone National park jail has not
held a prisoner in its 32 years of
existence and now has been razed.
“The only thing the jail has held
has been liquor which has been foun:l
cached by rum runners from the Ca
nadian border,” a park official as
serted, .
The jail was built in 1894, when
the park was under the administra
tion of the United States army. At
that time priseners were housed In
the army guardhouse.
THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
THIS WOMAN'S
| Wins Against 11l Health
“At times I was hardly able to do m
housework,” writes Mrs, Margaret WaK
lace of 1647 Safford
Ave,, Columbus,
Ohio. How many
women have found
themselves in thig
same condition!
How many women
have fought bravely
on day after day,
cooking, washing,
ironing, doing the
dishes, and keeping
the house clean,
when they were in
a weakened condition and had not suf
ficient strength to perform these duties
easily and properly!
‘When Mrs, Wallace was experiencing
great difficulty in carrying on the daily
tasks, a friend advised her to take
Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound and she gave it a fair trial, “I
just can’t give enough thanks to it”
ghe writes. “Now I can eat anything
at all and I am feeling better than I
have for years. I shall never be with
out your medicine again.”
A woman who is fighting for her
health and her family’s happiness is a
valiant soldier. She wages her battle
in her own kitchen. She has no thrill
ing bugles to cheer her on, no waving
banners.
Many other women tell us, as Mrs,
‘Wallace did, that Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound was their faithful
ally in the struggle for better health,
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Baby’s Crying Is
, o
Nature’s Warning
When Baby is fretful and cross, it
{8 nearly always Nature’s warning
that something is wrong with the little
stomach, liver or bowels.. Dangerous
{llness is often prevented when careful
mothers give Teethina without delay.,
Teethina is a Baby Doctor’s prescrip
tion—mild, efficient and harmless. It
gently cleanses, regulates and tones the
little stomach, liver and bowels. It
costs only 30c a package, yet money
can buy no finer remedy for colic, con
stipation, diarrhoea and such Baby ills,
FREE! SEND FOR USEFUL
Booklet About Babies.
C. J. MOFFETT CO, COLUMBUS, GA.
TEETHINA
Ruiids Better Babies
| Grove’s
Chill Tonic|
Invigorates, Purifies and
Enriches the Blood. s6oc
eye e —————y
One should never put one’s worship
into words.
B
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(| Jax
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The late Bishop Williams was .n a pox at
the opera one night, when after looking
around, one of the ladies exclaimed: ‘My
dear Bishop, did you ever see anything like
it in your life?” *“Never,” gravely replied
the Bishop, ‘‘mever since I was weaned.”
Any unusual exposure may cause & cold,
bronchitis or sore throat, and may develop
into serious ailment unless given prompt at
tention. When nature gives warning by a
sniffie or cough it is time to take
BOSCHEE’S SYRUP
the old reliable remedy. 80c and 00c bottles
at all druggists. If you cammot get it, write
to G. G. GREEN, INC., Woodbury, N. J.
Don’t wait until a cold gets its grip on
you, knock it out in the first rou;nd.
Your o
\ 117
system, . [&70)
7
| | needs A
; , 4/
| [Hancock
| |Sulphur Compound
, 1f you suffer from rheumatism, gout,
' eczema or hives, or if troubled with pim
ples, blackheads, freckles, blotches or
. other skin eruptions. your blood and skin
. need the purifying and healing effectsof
this tried old remedy.
Physiciang agree that sulphur isoneof
| 8 the bestand mosteffective blood purifiers
known to science. Hancock Sulphur
Compound is the most cificacious way to
use and benefit from Sulphur. Ag alo
tion, it soothes and heals; taken inter
naliy, it gets at the root of the trouble.
; 60c and $1.20 at your draggist’s.” If he
: eannot supply you, send his. name and
the price in stamps and we will gsend you §
‘ a bottle direct.
f HANcock Liquip SULPRUR COMPANY
Baltimore, Maryland
Haneock Sulphur Compow..d Ointment — 80¢
{ and 60c —for use with the Liquid Compound.
} r
S For their immediate relief and
i healing doctors prescribe
: CoE
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| IReslno
Woman, 111, Leaps
8 Stories to Death
New York.—While her ‘hus- L
band slept in an adjoining room
Mrs. Maude Woods, fifty, leaped
from the window of their eighth
floor apartment, and was killed
instantly.
The husband, Arthur =~ M.
Woods, president of a storage
warehouse company, found a
hastily penned note, which
read :
“My Blessed Husband:
“Forgive me for doing this ter
rible thing, but I am too sick
and discouraged to carry on.”
WINS STEALTHY
RACE WITH DEATH
Doomed Man Cheats the Chair
by Starvation.
Little Rock, Ark.—An aged Arkan
sas negro went to his grave trium
phant in a slow and stealthy race
against death by electrocution.
While Gov. Tom J. Terral delayed
fixing a date on which Tom Stribling,
Crittenden county, should be executed
for alleged murder under the “unwrit
ten law,” Stribling for 65 days refused
the meals that weare given him and
died from ppevmonia, induced by
starvation.
He carried out his campaign despite
the fact that several well-known citi
zens were preparing to appeal to the
governor for clemency. Stribling had
always denied that he killed the negro
who had attacked his daughter some
time before. Trial juries and the Su
preme court failed to accept the alibi
which he offered.
His sentence was affirmed three
months ago. Stribling was placed in
a cell with two other condemned ne
groes. On the day the other two were
executed, Stribling began his fast.
Penitentiary authorities ‘' did not
know of his intentions until about two
weeks ago. He took the meals that
were passed through the bars. It
was noted, however, that he spent most
of his time lying on his cot, refusing
to exercise. All the time Stribling was
consigning his untouched food to the
drain pipes awaiting only an occasion
al swallow of milk,
After his removal to the hospital
he abandoned his attempt at conceal
ment and declared himself on a “hun
ger strike.” Friends of the old negre
believe, however, that his purpose was
not to bid for freedom or commutation
but in his own words to “beat the elec
tric chair” by starvation. ‘
Able to Aid Wife or Boy
in Water; He Saves Son
Summitt, N. J—Faced with the
heartrending choice of saving either
his wife or his six-year-old son, when
their rowboat capsized on Silver lake,
Nels Johnson of Springfield, N. J., is
commiserating with his son, Charles,
while the body of his wife lies in
Union county morgue. And Johnson
is unable to convince himself why he
made the desperate choice that he did.
The Johnsons, with three men
friends, went out in the rowboat
late in the afternoon. A storm broke,
the boat turned over and all were
thrown into the lake. The boat drifted
away. Johnson found himself near
his wife and son, and one of the three
.men shouted to him: "’
“Save one of them, we'll try to get
the other.” Johnson grasped the boy
and struck out for shore. But the
other men were unable to reach his
wife.
Jack Rabbit Takes Hop
Through Windshield
Fairmont, Minn.—Dry Fairmont, al
leged to be the “Sahara” of the liquor
world, is talking about jack rabbits
so intrepid they jump through wind
shields.
Henry Nolte, former Martin county
editor, is the victim of the motor-hop
ping bunnies. His face was scratched
and cut from bits of glass.
Mr. Nolte says that while driving
he met two jack rabbits skipping down
the road. The glare of the headlights
served to increase their speed. One
of the rabbits, apparently thinking
that discretion is the better part of
valor, turned aside to let the car
pass.
The other paused in his flight and,
as the car approached, gave a tre
mendous spring and catapulted
through the windshield into Mr.
Nolte’s lap.
Follows Auato Victim;
Finds Her Own Child
New York—Thinking she might |
identify as a child of her neighbor
hood a girl she saw run down by an
automobile, Mrs. Laura Burns fol
lowed the car that hit the girl and
which carried her to Bellevue hospi
tal, {
When she looked at the child on the
cot, she screamed and fell to the floor.
Her own daugbter, Agnes, six, lay
there.
Hospital attendants removed the
mother and sent her home when she
had revived sufficiently. They did not
inform her that before her arrival at
the hospital the child had died.
Stunt Flyer Killed
Atlanta, Ga.—Torn frowa his para
chute by a gust of w'nd, Jimmy Cal
houn, stunt flyer, fell 400 feet to death
in a lake at Lagkewood, an amusement
resort here. 5
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WrEravey < ol
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MOTHER :— Fletcher’s & /
Castoria is especially pre- '
pared to relieve Infants in '
arms and Children all ages of 2
Constipation, Flatulency, Wind
Colic and Diarrhea; allaying 2
Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach
and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of W
Absolutely Harmless - No' Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it,
Cock-a-Doodle-Do!
Van Husen—l say! Why are you
putting chicken feathers in those gob
lets? |
New Butler—Didn’t you tell me to
serve cocktails?
‘ {l . .
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E‘fit' el | a
SN~A4y
25/4 Gran
A% Dancecl
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W were quite alarmed about mother. She wouldn’t
eat, was terribly constipated, bilious, and seemed to
be fading fast. We thought it due entirely to her 86 years
of age. But a neighbor brought over a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin and it was really remarkable how she picked right
ufi, and now she can even dance around with her grand- g 8
children. Now weare never without Syrup Pepsin in §ii? &
the house.” (Name and address furnished upon request.) 1 su
Regulates Bowels of Old Folks b g
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is so palatable, sets so ik 5%
well in the stomach, works so easily, so gently, so kindly (-
with old folks as to accomplish its g)urpose without ————-=
gripe, pain or other distress. For biliousness, sour m
stomach, coated tongue, comstipation, and the lassitude, whether DrCaldwell's'
of children, parents or those in the evening of lfe, Syrup &%
Pepsin is recommended everywhere. It is sold by all druggists. smp
For a free trial botile send name and address to
~ Pepsin Syrup Company, Monticello, Illinois. PEPSm
e —————————————— e et e e e
Worried
“Why is your wife so suspicious of
your stenographer?”
“She worked for me once.”
If one only didn’'t have to look for
ward to the cemetery as the place to
cease from troubling.
14 ‘ |
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-A " aANG
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WHEENS OB L \ 3
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SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” - Gpnuine
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are not
. getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by mils
lions and prescribed by physicians over 25 years for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia Toothache = Rheumatism
| DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART I
Accept only ‘‘Bayer” package
V which contains proven directions.
: Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets.
: Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salieylicacld
e G
THE BEST RECOMMENDATION
~ FOR ~
=
Bare-to-Hair
is the number who are trying to imitate it.
If Bare-to-Hair was not growing hair on bald
heads there would be no imitators. If there
is baldness or signs of it you can’t afford to
neglect touse“Forst’s Original Bare-to-Hair.”
Correspondence Given Personal Attention
W. H. FORST, Msgr.
SCOTTDALE - - PENNA.
... Dubious
“Could you tel! me a story for chil
dren ?”
“Do you mean these wise children
of today? I dunno.” — Louisville
Courier-Journal.
A Visible One
“Success depends upon backbone.”
“Your new evening gown {6 a suc
cess.”
One fact appears certain: No man
was ever ashamed of his ‘abillty to
save money.