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MOUSE-WORK
TO SER
Finds Aid in Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Plymouth, Wis. —"I am one of the
women taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound anti am
proud to say it is
good. I was so run
down that I didn’t
feel like doing any
thing and my
mother told mo to
try the Vegetable
Compound and I
did. It did me
good. I do my
housework and also
do all my garden
work and I have a three-year-old girl
to look after. I have told quite a few
others to try the Vegetable Compound
and I am willing to answer letters
about it.”—Mbs. Ed. Beils, R. 4, Ply
mouth, Wisconsin. ’ *
Drink Water
If Back or
Kidneys Hurt
Begin Taking Salts if You Fee!
Backachy or Have Bladder
Weakness
Too much rich food forms acids
which excite and overwork the kid
neys in their efforts to filter It from
the system. Flush the kidneys occa
sionally to relieve them like you re
lieve the bowels, removing acids,
waste and poison, else you may feel
a dull misery in the kidney region,
sharp pains in the back or sick head
ache, dizziness, the stomach sours,
tongue is coated* and when the weath
er is bad you have rheumatic twinges.
The urine is cloudy, full of sediment,
the channels often get irritated, oblig
ing one to get up two or three times
during the night.
To help neutralize these irritating
acids and flush oft the body’s urinous
waste, begin drinking water. Also get
about four ounces of Jad Salts from
any pharmacy, take a tablespoonful
in a glass of water before breakfast
for a few days and your kidneys may
then act fine and bladder disorders
disappear.
This famous salts is made from the
acid of grapes and lemon juice, com
bined with lithia, and has been used
for years to help clean and stimulate
sluggish kidneys and stop bladder ir
ritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive and
makes a delightful effervescent lithia'
water drink which millions of men
and women take now and then to
help prevent serious kidney and blad
der disorders. By all means, drink
lots of good water every day.
DON’T LET WORMS
TORTURE CHILDREN
Children who have worms
have not a chance of being
healthy. Watch for the symp
toms. Gritting the teeth, pick
ing the nostrils, disordered
stomach.
Rid your child’s body of these ruin
ous parasites. Give him Frey’s Ver
mifuge—America’s safe, vegetable
worm medicine for 75 years. Buy it
today. At all drug stores.
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms
ham am i
ff 3 from Kidney
Ues f’ © w. an d Bladder
H ® ■ Trouble. Don't
E Jy zel let these organs
I,^ make a martyr
g of you. Heed the first
B warning that ‘‘things are
jP’ not right.” Drink freely of water
and take Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Cap
sules, A world famous remedy for kid
ney .fiver, bladder and uric acid troubles
since 1656.
At all druggists. In three sizes. Look for the
name on the blue and gold box.
‘FUZZY’ ’
taste in the mouth of mornings,
means constipation and bilious-
Deaß ' DR. THACHER’S
VEGETABLE SYRUP
will stop this condition promptly. 60c ana
$1.20 bottles are sold and guaranteed by
Your Local Dealer
Scenario
“What are you doing now?”
“Adding a second story to Uncle
Tom’s Cabin.”
When in doubt it is a good plan to
tell the trulli.
That Cold
"“May End in Fla
Check it Todays
There’s away to do it—HILL’S. Does
the four necessary things in one.
Stops the cold in twenty-four hours,
checks the fever, opens the
bowels, tonestheentiresystem.
~.. That's the aid you need. Don’t
nlSl S be satisfied with anything less.
cx nne Go right now and get HILL’S,
jn t h e rel j box. 30c.
CoidS HILL'S
Ca»c»ra—Bromide—Quinine
Skin bleach. Wonderful and sure. For proof
.use one complete box of Kreinola. Cures the
most stubborn case of Eczema. Price 11.25. Free
Booklet. Agents wanted, br. C. H. BEUBY
CO., Dept. 8,2975 Michigan Are., Chicago
JWJyslvming
Fairy Tal^&
Hilary GrahamMx 110
' Bonner
GOLDFISH STORY
“Our home,” commenced the gold
fish known as Mi'. Tokyo Jones, “is
here, in this large bowl.
“We have nice gravel in it and some
pretty plants, and every morning we
get a little food.
“I know it is morning because I am
hungry. That is fairly bright of me
considering I am nothing but a gold
fish.
“Os course I am bright in color, but
not in brains.”
“That is the way I know it is
morning,” said Mr. Peking Baxter.
•‘And that is the way I know it,
too,” said Mr. Shanghai Wainwright.
The goldfish had been named by their
little owner Lucy.
“Os course if I didn’t get fed I
mightn’t be sure of it,” said Mr.
Tokyo Jones.
“I’d never be sure of knowing any
thing,” said Mr. Peking Baxter.
“And neithr would I,” said Mr.
Shanghai Wainwright.
“Well,” said Mr. Peking Baxter, “you
might as well tell us what you have
to tell us. You were going to tell us
something, you know.
“What was it? I’ve forgotten al
ready. My memory was never very
good.”
“I believe I've forgotten myself,”
said Mr. Tokyo Jons.
“Oh, dear, that’s too bad,” said Mr.
Shanghai Wainwright, splashing aud
waving a fin at Mr. Tokyo Jones.
“You’re a naughty, naughty forget
ful fish,” he said. “To be sure I might
be the same way myself, quite easily.”
“Quite easily,” echoed Mr. Tokyo
Jones.
“We’ll have to help him remember,”
said Mr. Peking Baxter.
“Perhaps each of us could remem
ber a little, little bit and so we'd get
the whole together after a time,” sug
gested Shanghai Wainwright.
“Yes, that would be a very good
I V ■
ymRVf
A
“Every Morning We Get a Little
Food.”
way,” said Mr. Tokyo Jones. “The
whole story is very, very short.”
“That's good,” said Mr. Peking Bax
ter. “Not that. I wish to be rude, but
we are too lazy even to hear a story
that is long.”
“We don’t want to splash too much
with excitement,” said Mr. Shanghai
Wainwright.
“Not that we are thinking of the
table outside the bowl, but we don't
want to be too active.”
By each thinking of something, they
helped Mr. Tokyo Jones to remember
that he had been going to tell them
about a little girl who had been vis
iting the house where they lived.
“There was no extra bedroom,”
said Mr. Tokyo Jones, “as the house
is very, very small, though it is big
ger than the bowl we live in anyway.
But the little girl slept on the
couch in this room where we live.
“She was afraid of us at first for
fear we would jump out of our bowl
ami land on her.”
“What could we do to her if we did
’such a thing?” asked Mr. Peking Bax
ter.
“We can’t live out of water and we
would just be no good at all if we
jumped out, and we could be of no
harm, either.”
“She got over her fear, after a few
nights,” said Mr. Tokyo Jones, “and
then she laughed at us.
“This is what she said:
“ ‘Those silly goldfish follow each
other around and all they do is to
blow bubbles, and eat sand and then
drop it out of their mouths, and eat
their breakfast at the top of the
water each morning.’
“That’s all,” ended Mr. Tokyo
Jones.
“Dull story like we are —it just
suits us. eh?”
And the others waved their fins in
agreement
He Should Say He Did!
“Well, Tommy, did you behave in
school today?” asked Tommy’s father
of his young son, who had not been
going to school very long.
“Behave?” exclaimed Tommy in a
tone of amazed surprise, “Os course I
did! Why, the teacher said she nev
er saw a pupil who behaved so.” —
From Children, The Magazine for
Parents.
After the Party
Little Jimmy had just returned from
his first birthday party.
“Jimmy,” his mother asked, “did you
have a good time, and did you dance
with the girls?”
“No. mother, I didn’t dance once,
and there were lots of empty girls,
too.”
THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
if JEJH
J3|o
allyw walls
For sleeping rooms — formal
parlors and reception halls —
dining room and living room
—for the library— and for
public buildings. Properly
applied it won’t rub off.
Write to US or ask your dealer
for a copy of our free drawing
book for children —“TheAlabas-
tine Home Color Book” —and a
free color card.
Write to us also for our beau
tiful £ree book “Artistic
Home Decoration” by our
Home Betterment Expert,
Miss Ruby Brandon, Alabas
tine Company, 222 Grandville
Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Alabastine —a powder in white and
tints. Packed in 5-pound packages,
ready for use by mixing with cold
or warm water. Full directions on
every package. Apply with an ordi
nary wall brush. Suitable for all
interior surfaces — plaster, wall
board, brick, cement or canvas,
w
Surprise Your Friends. Tell Them the
LATEST AVIATION NEWS
List best magazines &. books sent on request
Amr ©pfrialitrs
Aviation Equipment Supplies for AH Needs
1427 OWEQO AVE. CLEVELAND, OHIO
Single Girls
If you are single, send us your name and
address and receive a one dollar coupon and
valuable personal information free.
Mid-West Sales Service
1320 Oth St. Moline, 111.
SEND 10c FOR NEW TYPE CELLULOID
Neck tie clasp. Positive locking to shirt
button. State color —red, white, yellow or
black. Ideal around auto. Address J. H.
Oakes, 265 N Park Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
< HICKS OF qrALITV FROM Pl KEEKED
culled Hocks, Hocks, Reds, Leghorns, An
conas. Postage prepaid, guaran. live del. Free
catalog,price list. Lester’s Hatchery,Rome,Ga.
WHY SUFFER? WRITE O. C. BRI CE,
Kelsey City, Fla., for FREE sample ALLWUN
SALVE fgr asthma, colds, coughs, croup,
piles, sprains, bruises. Agents wanted.
LADIES—BE INDEPENDENT. Start a Mil
linery Establishment in your own hometown.
Big Profits, no risk. We supply all hats.
Cadillac Hats, 41 W. 36th St., New York.
Welcome to It
“Do you think I shall win your
sister’s hand, Eric?”
“I hope so. At present about all she
uses it for is to clout me with.”
Why Not Enjoy Life?
New Orleans, La. — “For one
year I could not stand on my feet
five minutes nor do
any kind of work.
I suffered with sick
stomach, headache,
backache and pains
in my sides. I went
to several doctors
and the only thing
they could see was
an operation, but I
could not make up
my mind to have it.
My sister told me
of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. I
relt better with the first bottle, so I kept
on taking it. I only weighed 89 pounds
when I started and now I weigh 141. I
don't know what it is to have a pain or
a cramp any more.” — Mrs. Pauline
Daniel, 3136 Constance St. Fluid o’
tablets. Any dealer.
When you have decided to get rid of worms,
use “Dead Shot,’’ Dr. Peery's Vermifuge.
One dose will expel them. All druggists.
60c.
eprPeerv’s
Vermifuge
At druggists or 372 Pearl Street. New York City
The early edition catches the book
worm.
When You Feel a Cold Coming On.
Take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tab
lets to work off the Cold and to fortify
the system against an attack of Grip
or Influenza. 30c.—Adv.
To talk all the time, it is hard to
be strictly honest.
BEST WAY TO KILL
Always lice
1 Stearns* Electric Paste
B Sore Death to cockroaches, waterbugi, etc.
1 Used by housekeepers for 50 years 1
• Directions in 15 languages.
AU Dealers 2 oz. 35c —15 oz. $1.50
Money Back 1£ it Sails
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 11-1928.
Community
*1 J*
feOidaihgJ
Communities Do Well
to Beautify Highways
This editorial, from the Grants
Pass (Ore.) Courier, has a universal
application:
Southern Oregon Is the garden spot
of the Pacific coast. Here nature lias
done her utmost in providing beauty
for all of us to appreciate. Unfor
tunately there have been many in .he
past who have been unable to appre
ciate these natural advantages, just
as there are people today who can
not see the beauty of their surround
ings.
Native trees and shrubs which once
lined the highways of southern Ore
gon have been removed in many
places. In their place can be found
old stumps and fallen trees. Old cans,
bottles and other rubbish left by un
thinking campers are seen from the
highway where there might be beau
tiful natural parks to delight every
visitor.
Cities of southern Oregon have
awakened to the need for improve
ment of the scenery along the main
arteries of travel. A concerted plan
is now being developed by which it is
hoped there will be a full co-opera
tion in making these highways roads
through giant parks.
One way this can be accomplished
is through the planting of trees and
shrubs along the highways. Another
is the removal of unsightly deposits
of cans and other rubbish. Highways
lined with beautiful shade trees of
varieties best suited for the various
localities would certainly prove a
wonderful attraction in years to come.
To Stimulate Interest
in Vegetable Garden
One thousand dollars in prizes for
the best ornamental and kitchen gar
dens will be awarded In 1928 by the
Woman's Home Companion in con
junction with local chambers of com
merce and other civic bodies.
Last year prizes were offered by
the magazine, for the first time, for
both ornamental and vegetable gar
dens and the judges were keenly dis
appointed when the ornamental va
riety of entries outnumbered vege
table gardens 25 to 1. Prizes are there
fore reoffered this year in the hope
that interest' in growing vegetables
will be stimulated.
“Tins' lack of interest in gardening
was the more regrettable,” says the
magazine, “since last summer green
corn on the cob was .$1.25 a dozen ears
in New York. Another instance of the
growing indifference to raising food
stuffs is shown in the fact that an
authoritative report cites such in
stances as one agricultural high
school with 1.150 students, only eight
of whom had chosen agriculture as
a vocation.”
In the Flower Garden
It is quite true that mixtures 01
flowers growing in a garden seldom
offend us. To the average observer
flowers are endurable, even pleasant,
whatever their colors and arrange
ment. The point is not that mixtures
offend, but that they fail to charm.
Witl) few exceptions where mixtures
are planted in the garden the effect
of a flower group as a group is de
stroyed. Individually the flowers are
not affected, but in the mass they
become relatively insignificant. One
color destroys another. The excep
tions are those families in which the
color range is so narrow that all va
rieties harmonize.
Where on the other hand groups of
flowers of a single color are grown the
impression of each blossom is multi
plied by its association with the oth
ers; and if other groups similarly
planned are grown near by the appeal
is still further increased and the be
holder becomes conscious not of mere
flowers but of beautiful flowers, which
are not negatively pleasant but posi
tively charming.
Pulmotor for Trees
Trees weakened by insufficient oxy
gen, due to obstructions or surplus
water about the roots, are restored to
vigorous growth by a special "pulmo
tor” treatment which is said to have
been administered with good results.
It consists in forcing air currents
about the roots. This is done with
the aid of a compressor operating at
about 100 pounds pressure and a long
hollow “gun” with a shut-off. The gun
is forced into the ground to the depth
of the roots as far from the tree as
the ends of the branches. The air is
then turned on and off, the action of
the air being visible to the operator
by the rise and fall of the earth.—
Popular Mechanics Magazine.
Painting Is Protection
By keeping all surfaces of lumber
used in your home smooth and free
from decay there will he no neces
sity for expensive repairs. Money
may be devoted to additions rather
than to replacements. The fire men
anee we guard against with insurance
is not nearly so costly to us as is
the yearly loss we suffer from the
decay of unpainted lumber. Think
well on the great truth involved in
the idea that when you save tile sur
face you protect the entire structure.
Decorating problems require an in
dividual solution, and it is often nec
essary to consult a reliable painter of
experience.
-Q The Cream
of the
■B-^^^^^Tobacco
Crop
1 J&ckyj
'ijl
“I Appreciate.
Lucky Strike” Mils
Says George ®
M. Cohan
America’s Stage
Favorite
“Good old Luckies!
1 We’ve been pals for £
years. Andlike an old
friend they treat me
well. No irritation to
my throat and no
coughing. And I ap- g
predate Lucky Strike g
—the full body tobac* s
co with the toasted /
flavor that’s been the /
same since that day g ggas W|l
we met.” g
“It’s toasted”
No Throat Irritation-No Cough»
©1928, The American Tobacco Co., Inc.
/ Calumet contains |
f t Us two l eaven i n 2 I
• a ~V. ~ mF units; one begins to |
v> S’ 6 1 W work when the I
\ x dough is mixed; the g
other waits for the
heat of the oven —
then both units
work together.
Gives you double
value and a double
-J / safeguard against
! / 4 failure because it is |
I DOUBLE
J makes Llesstham
SlKh^llllEP^^ BAKING EASIER gjJ
PBW 11 ««BAKING
Many people in Madagascar live in
Villages 20 miles from water and get
their beverages from the cactus plant
or drink milk.
WLDoi^las Shoes
FOR MEN, THE NEWEST
WOMEN AND BOYS a-. Wd STYLES FOR SPRING n
America's
Best Known Shoes
J^WSSPW
HERE’S A WAY
T <> SAVE MONEY!
^ ca ^ ^ c following statement. • •
/• F 0 1 Despite the fact that leather prices have gone up tre*
I Hindis fpjyP&§SSj^ mendously in the past several months W. L. Douglas
n Isss! iwjSESj^ shoes for Spring are the same high quality at the same
IF J popular prices.
’ Hides increased 75% to 85% in price during 1927. “But”, you
? \\ ask, "if that is true, how can Douglas Shoes sell at the same price
JV and still be as good as ever?”
\v j\ And here’s why— early in 1927 we foresaw this rise in prices—we
contracted at the prevailing low prices for enough fine leather to
\\ make the shoes we arc offering this Spring in 120 W. L. Douglas
stores in the principal citicsandthroughreliabledealcrsevery
flSwPf^X xix where. A fair and square retail price stamped on the soles of
gfIgHMQ Douglas shoes at the factory, guarantees honest value.
% A Men’s $5 to sß—Women’s $5 to sß—Boys’ $4 to $5
M ©'© ©TO A Catalog of New Spring Styles mailed on requests
sddinyour W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.
prWHmHwtown. write for catalogue and agency. X 73 Spark Street, Brockton, Mass.
I If your bathroom fixtures tend to
I rust, wipe often witli a woolen clotb
saturated in gasoline or ammofla.
I They prevent rust.