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WHAT DR. CALDWELL
LEARNED IN 47
YEARS PRACTICE
%
: A physician watched the results of
constipation for 47 years, and believed
that no matter how careful people are of
their health, diet and exercise, constipa
tion will occur from time to time. Os
, mext importance, thfin, is how to treat
' it when it comes. Dr. Caldwell always
was in favor of getting as close to nature
~as possible, hence his remedy for consti-
Bfl.tion, known as Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup
epsin, is a mild vagetable compound.
It can not harm the system and is not
habit forming. Syrup Pepsin is pleasant”
tasting, and youngsters love it.
Dr. Caldwell did not approve of
drastic physics and purges. He did not
believe they were good for anybody’s
system. In a practice of 47 years he
never saw any reason for their use when
Syrup Pepsin will empty the bowels just
as promptly.
Do not let a day go by without a
bowel movement. Do not sit and hope,
but go to the nearest druggist and get
one of the generous bottles of Dr. Cald
well’s Syrup Pepsin, or write “Syrup
Pepsin,”” Dept. 88, Monticello. Illinois,
for free trial bottle.
e
Annual Fire Losses
It is estimated by Charles H. Meigs,
fire commissioner of New York, that
there are two human lives and SGO,-
€OOO worth of property destroyed by
fire in the United States every hour.
The total fire loss for the month of
January, 1928, was in excess of $43,-
000,000, or about $5,000,000 ahead of
» January, 1927. Our fire losses in
1926 were double what they were in
1916 and three times what they were
in 1915. Our annual fire losses total
mearly $500,000,000. ]
. Trees as History Books
The Tlingit Indians of the North
west, authentically the totem pole
tribe, carved their histories on poles
which required entire tree trunks.—
Woman’s Home Companion,
Turkey was unknown to the an
cients and America knows it only once
a year,
You can'he so polite to a man as
to make him dislike you.
sRN A GRS
‘v'{;{?‘ L
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetablo
Compound Helps Her S 0 1.4
i
Cleveland, Ohio.—“l sure recom
mend Lydia E. Pin}_liham’s Yegetable
% Compound to any
:§ woman in the con
‘} dition T was in. I
‘] was so weak and
:f run-down that I
‘] could hardly stand
‘qup. I could not
‘feat and was full
:] of misery. A friend
il living on Arcade
| Avenue - told me
about this medi
cine and after tak
ing ten bottles my
weakness and nervousness areoall
gone, I feel like living again. I am
still taking it until I feel strong like
before., You may use this letter as a
testimonial.”—Mgs. ErizAperH Toso,
114913 Hale Ave., Cleveland, Ohio.
Chill Tonic
Stops Malaria, Restores
Strength and Energy. 6oc
MEDITERRANEAN {Zuiz
8600 up
ss *‘Transylvania® sailing Jan. 30
Clark’s 25th cruise, 66 days, including Madeira,
Canary Islands, Casablanca, Rabat, Capital of
¢ Morocco, Spain, Algiers, Malta, Athens, Con
stantinople, 15 days Palestineand Egypt, Italy,
Riviera, Cherbourg, (Paris). Includes hotels,
uides, motors, etc.
sonny-uodlbmnm. June 29, 1929; s6ooup
FRANK C.CLARK, Timesßidg.,N.X.
e T o
MERCHANTS IN CLOTHING, SHOES AND
GENERAL MERCHANDISE. Better mer
chandise, more satisfied customers, more prof
its, isn’t that what you want? Well, we put
slightly, used suits, coats, pants,
hats, shoes, and All Sorts of
‘General Merchandise in first class
shape, and place it into your estab
lished or new business. Your income
will double at once and will continue
to grow, Low prices and high grade
merchandise will do it. Write for
Catalogue, " Mid-West Jobbing Co.,
1130 So. Whipple St. - - Chicago, Il
SAVE SI.OO TO $1.50
Buy ' direct from manufacturer, genuine
broad cloth Hoover dresses, long or short
collars, sizes 34 to 46; or smocks 3 for $2.00.
Colors white, blue, rose and green; can also
be had in fine quality chambray; perfect fit
ting garments, Your money back if not
satisfied. Specify sizes and colors. Don’t
send money—pay postman $2.00 plus postage.
B. B. TOGS CO.
48 8. Liberty St. - - Baltimore, Md.
SECRETS OF 'CHARACTER ANALYSIS
from handwriting revealed in_new book; $1;
fitst 100 copies autographed, ELWOOD
STOCK, 320% Camden St.,” Newark, N, J.
WANTED—Honest reliable people for Credit
Adjusting. WORLD’S LARGEST CREDIT
HOUSES. Adjustment Assoe., Smyrna, N, X.
PARIS IS ALARMED :
FOR FASHION TRADE
Style Fixers Realize They
Must Please America. ~
Paris.—There must be a new meth
od established in the creation of
French styles for the United States
and South America.
That, is the opinion of M. Rene
Herbst, president of the Society of
Modern Decorators, who is spreading
propaganda for the creation of spe
cial establishments throughout the
world -for the presentation of Irench
models. ' 3
He is not alone in his belief, and
the French style-fixers are ready to
contribute a fund of several million
francs to protectr their. interests
abroad. They have been considerably
alarmed, they admii, during the last
few years by the tendency of Ameri
can dressmakers, milliners, and in
terior decorators to take the I'rench
motifs and adapt them to the par
ticular needs of their own country.
During the winter, several groups
of French business men are to visit
the principal cities of hoth the Amer
fcas. They are to study American
methods and American needs. Wheth
er .they will be able to meet both
without ruining their own artistic
pride, according to one prominent
French writer, is the question that is
worrying them most.
“Rut we are losing severai miliion
francs of commerce every year simply
because do not give exactly what the
clients want,” is the argument behind
the new movement, “We are too proud
of our own ideas, and unless we grant
some leeway to the creative genius of |
other nations, France's luxpry trade
is certain to suffer seriously during |
the next few years.”
One-Way Traffic Plan |
Is Feailure in London
London.—One-way traffic may be
all right for American cities, but in
London, it has been tried and found ;
wanting. Two committees on the traf
fic of London, the police committee
and the streets committee have both
reported that the one-way street sys
tem is “not suitable” for London.
A three months’ trial period has just
ended, during which certain heavily
traveled streets have carried traffic
in one direction only. After weigh
ing the results of the experiment, it
was decided that the one-way system
slowed up London traffic instead of
increasing its speed.
The peculiar arrangement of Lon
don is blamed for the inability to ap
ply the one-way system. . Whereas
most American cities are laid out
more or less on the gridiron system,
London is a maze of twisting streets,
more like a series of concentric cir
cles connected by spokes with the
Thames as diameter than anything
else. The failure of the one-way
plan leaves London authorities up
against the question once again of
trying to find some solution for un
tangling the most complicated traffic
in the world. '
Turpentine Soaked Girl
Burns Self to Death
New York.—Apparently disappointed
in love, Miss Louisa Amelia de Hos
tos, thirty-eight years old, set herself
afire in her upper west.side apartment
and died at Harlem hospital. Miss de
Hostos, said by a friend to be the
daughter of Eugenia de Hostos, a
Porto Rican educator for. whom a
monument has been erected in San
Juan, came to New York to seek a
career as an author, At the hospital
it was ‘said she had saturated her
clothing with turpentine and, after
climbing into the bathtub, had applied
a match, 5
. Line Forms on Left
New York.—Wanted: A rich woman
ambitious to fly the Atlantic in a
dirigible. Bert Campbell, who came
over on the Cedric as a aight watch
man, says he is an Australian aviator
with an airship ready.
Quits Sea for Cabbage
New York.—After 28 years at sea
Capt. Sir James Charles, commander
of the Aquitania, is on his last voy
age. He is retiring to grow cabbage.
he says.
S e e et
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% Squash Played 2,000 3
- . o
% Years Ago in Yucatan x
% New Orleans.—Evidence that *
:'; a game similar to squash was :KX:
% played by natives of Yucatan
:g 2,000 years ago was found by ;5:
% a Tulane university expedition, %
:'{ which returned from an explor- :'f:
KX ing trip through Central Amer- o
:f, ica and Mexico, 3:
z Dr, Frans Blom of the depart- fg
% ment of middle-American re
-2 search of Tulane, who headed :,’:
% the expedition, said he found &
g courts upon which the game had g
% been played by the ancient May- #
% an tribes. The courts still were :
# in excellent repair, he said, and
: there could be no mistake about ’:i.‘
.| %' what they were used for. 2
: The game apparently had been ;
: played with rubber balls which :;':
4 had been knocked back and é
z\forth, across the court with *
% something similar to rackets. s
: Heretofore, Doctor Blom ex- :
% plained, it had been thought
: such games had not been played z
# in that section earligr than 1,000 :
z or 1,200 years ago.
:@**WW*Wflz
THE BULLETIN. IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
Sailors Tell of Paradise of
South Pacific.
New York.—For nearly eighty years
sea ruptains have talked of the ex
istence of a “Jost” island somewhere
in the south Pacific, a lonely paradise
of green palms, gleaming b2aches of
powdered coral and blue lagoons, all
guarded by a ring of saw-toothed
reefs over which the tortured sea
boils in sheets of foam,
Passing ships have reported it lying
low in the turquoise sea like an emni
erald, but when the hydrographers
have tried to locate and chart it they
have found nothing but the empty
ccean.
Some persons have regarded it as
a myth, others as one of the strange
phantoms of the sea, while the more
practical ones have declared it to
Lave been one of the floating islands
not uncommon in tropical wafers. A
few believe it to be so low lying in
the sea that it is easy to miss.
Reported in 1859,
It was ftirst reported in_ 1859, and
one year later the United States cor
vette Levant dropped out of aight for
ever on her way from Hilo to Pana
ma. There was some reason to sup
pose that she went to look for ‘the
island, for, while the corvette was in
port at Honolulu in June, 1860, Lieu
tenant Stout, her executive efficer, ex
pressed great interest in the island and
talked with several merchant captains
about its probable location.
The Levant was heading southeast
when she left Hilo and sailing a
course which, if+continued, would take
her across the equator and into the
latitude of the mysterious island.
Basis for Tale.
It was partly around the Levant
that Edward Everett Hale wove his
imaginary tale of “The Man Without
a Country,” in which lte propbetiecally
wrote of the foundering of the war
ship, but fixed the date nearly three
years later than her actual disappear
ance, naming the time of Nolan's death
on tpe Levant, after fifty years of
voyaging and transfers from ship to
ship, as May 11, 1863, in latitude 2
degrees 11 :minutes south and longi
tude 131 west, somewhere near 1,500
to 2,000 miles southeast of Honolulu.
On that date the Levant had in all
probability been lying at the bottom
of the sea for nearly three years, as
she left -’lO in August, 1860, and van
ished.
No vessel ever spoke to her at sea
after she disappeared into the re
gions of the trade winds. While at
Honolulu, Lieutenant Stout, with much
pride, showed to his ship's visitars
the stateroom Phillip Nolan was sup
posed to have occupied.
Fires Forest to Kill
Girl Who Jilted Him
Toronto, Ont.—The story of an In
dian who set fire to a forest in which
the maid who jilted him had fled with
his rival, came from the north woods
recently.
Capt. Roy Maxwell; director of the
provincial air service, told the story
in describing the work of his depart
ment, part of which was to aid the
royal Canadian mounted police in cap
turing the smitten Indian.
The Indian hag been singing love
songs to a girl of his race. She jilted
him and fled with another suitor into
the woods. Following them, the re
jected suitor waited' vrtil the couple
entered a forest area in the Lake
Savant region, Then he methodically
set to work to fire the whole area. A
forest ranger surprised him at the
task and extinguished the several fires
the Indian had set. The brave es
caped. :
Enlisting the aid of the air service,
the royal Canadian mounted flew into
the wilderness to the Indian’s camp
and arrested him.
Volunteers Replace '
Professional Models
Paris,—Professional artist models
are dying out as a class in this citadel
of art. Never before have there been
so many artists in Paris, so many
schools and so many galleries; but
models, particularly women, are a
vanishing race.
With a few rare exceptions, the
professionals have been replaced by
an anonymeus crowd of out-of-work
manikins from dressmaking establish
ments, chorus girls and, above all, by
- persons devoted to the
cause of art.
Art is so much the fashion that
painters and sculptors often find their
choice of models limited only by the
list of their acquaintances. Many
American girls, well educated, of good
families, consider it an honor to pose
in the studios of Montparnasse and
Montmartre. s
» Dig Up Ruined City
| Gibraltar.—A group of archeologists
| have obtained financial backing for a
| plan to excavate the ancient city of
| Carteia. Interest in the project was
| first touched last year when a Span
| iard accidentally discovered a Roman
| sarcophagus and other evidence of
| ancient habitation.
I Hens Not Wanted
| Atlantic City, N. J—“ Visitors to
| this resort do not come here to hear
' | cackling hens and crovqlng roosters,”
- | asserted Recorder Coric in imposing a
. | fine upon a citizen who had started
| & small poultry yard within the limits
, . of the city. ; i
REAL LUXURY FOR
- THE BRITISH TAR
New Battleship Nelson Has
Even a Soda Fountain.
London.—H. M, S, Nelson, the new
est addition to the British navy, is
equipped with a soda fountain. Aside
from the armament, she has many
other points of interest which would
surprise the tars who sailed the seven
seas 100 years ago, .
In her domestic arrangements the
Nelson sets a new standard. When
going to sea she takes along 1,600 gal
lons of rum, 156,000 pounds of flour,
42,000 pounds of sugar, 7,000 pounds
of tea, 43,000 tins of condensed milk,
20,000 pounds of frozen meat, 40,000
pounds of vegetables, 5,000 pounds of
tobacco and 10,000 pounds of soap. In
addition she carries large quantities
of fresh meat and other consumable
stores. E
The catering department of the Nel
son is equal in its equipment and or
ganization to that of a first-class ho
tel. The men’s meals are prepared by
a staff of expert cooks in kitchens that
have all sorts of modern electrical ap
pliances. .In the bakery all the work
is done by machinery and the food is
not handled.
The, mess decks where the crew live
are lighted by scuttles instead of arti
ficial light, which is used in most war
ships. Every section of the crew has
its own bathrooms,
There are comfortable recreation
rooms supplied with papers and maga
zines for the use of the men who are
off duty and there is a well-stocked
general shop at which the men buy
whatever they need. Moving picture ;
entertainments are provided for them
and there is a fairly large chapel.
Modest English Maiden
Heiress to $100,000,000
London.—Gladys Yule, twenty-four,
the shy and little-knewn daughter of
Sir David Yule, a merchant of Cal
cutta, is expected to become the rich
est heiress in the United Kingdom
through the death of her father re
cently. His estate is estimated at
$100,000,000.
Miss Yule and her mother, Lady
Yule, the only daughter of the late
Andrew Yule of Calcutta, live®in the
cathedral town of St. Albans. She is
known to be fond of hunting and vis
ited northern Alaska and the Klondike
with her mother,
Sir David controlled 80 companies,
most of which he had built up him
self. He was a Scotchman, born in
Edinburgh. He worked in his offices
in his shirt sleeves and disliked be
ing regarded as a millionaire. He
frequently bestowed as much as $250,-
000 at a time on various charities, al
ways with the understanding that his
identity be not disclosed.
‘ i ot TR
Nebraska University
| to Display Fossils
Lincoln, Neb.—At the University of
Nebraska a setting is being created
for the display of fossils of elephants,
tortoises and armadilloes many mil
lions of years old. These were found
at Niobrara in the valley ox the Platte
river in western Nebraska. - 3ecause
of the soft sandstone in that region,
parts of the bones weré left visible—
a circumstance facilitating the task
of collecting them.
The bones vary in size from the”
skull of a mamn;oth to the skeleton
of a shrew, the smallest of mammals.
The elephant serves as the Kkeynote
for the entire exhibit, ten different
kinds of elephants having been found
in Nebraska. .
Bird Has One Wing
Franklin, N. H.—George Dunn e¢ap
tured a one-winged bird and is keep
ing it. It is a swallow and has one
perfectly developed wing. There is
no sign of a second wing and no place
where a second wing ever appears to
have been attached. ;
e
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% ‘Last Indian Rodeo ?
3 Staged by Old Chief %
2 Falls City, Neb.—An eigh:y-%
% year old Indian chieftain has §
% seer his last rodeo swing into s
: prdtress with hundreds of In- g
% dians from eight tribes partici- %
% pating. 3
I‘:I For nearly a score of years s
% Chief White Cloud has conduct- %
% ed his annual “educational ro- %
:§Z deo.” He has taken pride in %
:,X: the claim that “his show” is the 2
% only one truly characterizing .
% the Indians of America before z
% the advent of white settlers. X
% But the old chief brought to- ;
:Ev: gether his rodeo equipment for o
’; the last time this year. He z
4 doesn't know how long ago he #
% passed the eighty mark, but he 3:
&% is satisfied he will not continue
2 his enterprise another season. :
% Stimulated by White Cloud’s *
:f'Z announcement that he is through 2
% with the rodeo business, ‘the as- %
z fair this year was one of the §
% old Indian’s greatest. From >
3 lowa, Kansas and Nebraska s
z members of the various tribes %
5 assembled to take part in the z
: last “true rodeo.” :
4 Hundreds of Indian warriors #
z with their squaws and their z
% papooses assembled to don thelr s
z war paint, lose every possible :
% vestige of civilization and take :
% a wholehearted part in the
# celebration of Chief White z
3 Cloud’s retirement. z
3wn¢-mmnm‘
. .
Inoculating Scil
+ to Help Legumes
s 3
Some of Strains Required
for Successful Culture
~of Many Plants.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
When to inoculate the soil for a
legume and when to depend on the
presence of the necessary bacteria al
ready in the soil has puzzled many
farmers. It is true that soils in many
sections of the country are well inocu
lated with one or more of the strains
of bacteria required for successful cul
ture of some of the legumes, and at
the same time poerly provided with
the bacteria needed by other legumi
nous crops.
Bacteriologists studying the strains
of bacteria that work in' the roots of
legumes have identified seven com
mon groups, and the members of each
group are for thé most part capable
of inoculating several species of
legumes,
Alfaifa Bacteria.
One group listed by bacteriologists
of the -United States Department of
Agriculture iacludes the alfalfa bac
teria which are also capable of inocu
lating bitter clover, button clover, Cal
ifornia bur clover, fenugreek, south
ern bur clover, white sweet clover,
yellow sweet clover, and yellow tre
foil. Introduction of alfalfa into some
of the areas west of the Mississippi
is relatively easy, because the soil
is naturally ifnoculated with the prop
er bacteria. ’
The red clover bacteria will also in
oculate alsike clover, crimson clover,
hop clover, low hop' clover, mammoth
red clover, rabbit-foot clover, and
white clover.
Vetch bacteria inoculate the Canada
field pea, common vetch, garden pea,
hairy vetch, broad bean (horse bean)
lentil, narrow-leaf vetch, purple vetch,
and sweet pea.
The garden and navy bean bacteria
are interchangeable,
The lupine bacteria inoculate the
blue lupine, serradella, the sundial
(wild) lupine, and the European yel
low lupine.
Cowpea Bacteria.
The legumes inoculated by the cow
pea bacteria are, the cowpea, Florida
beggarweed, Jack bean, Japan clover,
Kudzu, Lima bean, partridge pea,
peanut, pigeon pea, tick trefoil, te
pary bean, and Deering velvet bean.
The soy bean, unlike the foregoing,
is associated with bacteria not relat
ed to any of the commonly known
strains. This, together with the fact
that soy beans have been grown ex
tensively for only twenty-five years in
this country, indicates the necessity
for artificial inoculation where soy
beans are grown for the first time.
If the crop rotation is planned a
year or mere ahead and it is desired
to introduce a legume not hitherto
grown, it is possible to make a test
planting and determine whether the
soil contains the bacteria necessary
for the crop. This will be indicated
by the presence of the nodules on the
roots of the plants in the test plot.
) :
Planting Winter Wheat
Sometimes Hard Problem
Winter wheat is a crop which takes
| nine months to raise, she longest
length of time of all our annual crops.
There are seasonal vicissitudes and
insect pests all along the way. The
season may be too dry for the seed
to germinate or it may be too wet
té sow the crop. High winds and bare
ground and low temperatures of win
ter are a menace—thawing and freez
ing may ruin the crop and rust, the
green bug, hessian fly, army worm and
chinch bug may all take theiv toll. It
may be sowed too early or too late.
Although late sowing is preferable to
excessively early sowing.
':oo:nznzo‘:n:n:n:oo:“:oo:«:«:oo:n::':n:«:n:n:“:“:»:“:u:n:o
Agricultural Notes
In 1927 in the United States 2,263
agricultural agents were employed.
® % %
Regardless of the summer price of
milk, it pays to keep the dairy herd
in good condition during the summer
months.
{* % »
Two important ways farmers are
lowering the cost of production are
by securing higb yields and by keep
ing operating costs at a low figure,
L ] * *
Temperature of barns will remain
more uniform, svock will be healthier,
and the frost nuisance will be prac
tically eliminated by good ventilation.
s * % %
Careful shocking and stacking of
barley is an important factor in se
curing good quality grain for market.
The seed will be discolored and is apt
to sprout if left in the stack too long,
s ® %
| A promising new variety of alfalfa
| for the Northern states is the result
of a small package of seed received 18
years ago by the United States De
partment of Agriculture through its
| office of foreign plant intreduction.
The new variety is known as “Ladak.”
w ® %
Bluegrass in pastures is very de
pendent on a supply of nitrogen for
successful growth. This supply is fur
nished largely by the clovers present,
so it is evident that when the clover
begins to fail, because of a lack of
phosphorus and lime, the bluegrass
also begins to fail, because of a lack
| of nitrogen, .
.
Constipation Gone.
Has Roses in Her
Cheeks Now
“About seven years ago, I was dy
ing slowly of constipation, My. sys
tem was full of poison, which not
only dulled my senses, but my com
plexion was muddy, eyes blurred, my
stomach was ruined, and I was con
tinually catching cold. I did not have
any life or energy.
“After reading one of your ads, I
bought several bottles of Milks Emul
sfon, and began improving at once.
Improvement was so marked that ev
eryone noticed it, and spoke of how
it cleared my skin, made my eyes
much brighter, and put roses in my
cheeks. In fact, I was an entirely dif
ferent person, I took altogether 15
large bottles of Milks Emulsion, and
looked wonderful and felt the same
way. It absolutely made me over. It
adds moresto your looks than any
thing I have ever heard of. After I
had taken the first 8 bottles, people
began to notice the improvement in
my skin and my eyes being brighter.
“Every woman should know of it, 1
have never had a eold since I took
Milks Emulsion, no stomach trouble
or constipation. I think it is a God
send to humanity.
“A mnephew of mine was almost
dead of stomach trouble. I started
him on Milks Emulsion and while he
has only taken 4 bottles, he can eat
nearly anything, and is beginning to
feel fine.
“You will always find me a Milks
Emulsion booster.”” MRS. REBECCA
CAMPBELL, R. R.l, Dyersburg, Tenn,
Sold by all druggists under a guar
antee to give satisfaction or money
refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co.,
Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv.
The Gay Old Trader
Trader Horn, the aged litterateur,
was congratulated by a New York
girl reporter on the zest witl) which
he went the rounds of New York din
ner parties, teas and receptions.
“Well, you see, I enjoy it all, my
girl,” said the old trader., “I'm not
like the scientist. -
“A lady reproached the scientist
for refusing to go out into society.
“‘lt must bore you dreadfully,” she
said. *“Work, work, nothing but work
all the time.
“‘l'm only bored, ma'am,” the
scientist answered, ‘when being en
tertained.” e
Valuable Find
A $200,000 sandalwood forest has
been found in the jungle region of
Kamkanhally, India. The Musore
government has granted $3,600 for
collection and transportation of the
wood, which it is estimated will
amount to 600 tons, worth 600,000
rupes, or about $216,000.
P e S i,
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THERE Is nothing that has ever
taken the place of Bayer Aspirin as
an antidote for pain. Safe, or physi
cians wouldn’t use it, and endorse its
use by others. Sure, or several mil
lion users would have turned to some
thing else. But get real Bayer Aspirin
(at any drugstore) with Bayer on the
box, and the word genuine printed in
red: ; »
. Ba}'er,ra y
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Catalogue of Notables
The Almanach de Gothg is a French
almanac which was first published in
1763, and gives genealogical partic
ulars concerning all the sovereign
houses of Europe, the mediatized fam
ilies of Germany and many of the Eu
ropean princely and ducal houses not
of sovereign rank. It also contains
valuable information regarding offi
cers of administration and statistics
of the principal political divisions of
the world.
Her Testimony Doubted
“What is your age?”
“Twenty-two, judge.”
“I forgot to remind you, ‘'madam,
that you are under oath.”
e e
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
Since 1846 Has Healed Wounds and
Sores on Man and Beast
Money back for first hottlaif not suited. All dealers.
& "
Itching Piles
Instantly Relieved g soon cured by ap
| flyin_g PAZO OINTMENT, ItStops
rritation, Soothes, Heals and is guaranteed
to Cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding
or Protruding Piles, All Druggists have
PAZO OINTMENT in tabes with pile pipe
sttachraent at 75¢c; and in tin box at 60c.
W. N. U.,, ATLANTA, NO. 37.-19.28.