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MILLEDuEVILLE NEWS
HELPED GRANT TO FORTUNE WHEN THE BIRDS FLY NORTH
Sculptor Outlines Most Preten
tious Tribute of Modern Times
to Soldiers of World War.
MUSEUM AND TEMPLE IN CUE
jin Conception It Can Be Compared I
Only to the Wonderful Basilica
of Imperial Rome—Is Leading
Sculptor.
Home.—An exhibition of Antonie
iSciortino’s “Monument of the Na
if inns” will be opened in Itome in the
fall, and the model, ns well 11s thou
sands of sketches and plans, is to be
on view in his studio at tl«e British
academy. This monument is one of
the most pretentious ever planned In
modern times. In conception it can be
compared only to the wonderful
'basilica of Imperial Home.
It was in 1017 that Professor Selor-
tino, pondering over ttie war in which '
millions of soldiers were killed, planned !
a monument which would be a fitting 1
one for the heroic dead, as well as a |
museum and temple combined. Ills
original Idea was that it should be an
international monument, one which
'could he erected on some historic spot,
on a battlefield, lie suggested to many
jfriends that, while the bones scattered
•over many battlefields could he in-
jterred in the walls of the crypt, one
jcentral tomb should be a memorial for
all, whether privates or officers, tin
'the sketches which ho made in 1!)17
ihe wrote: “Plans for a monument to
an unknown soldier and sailor.” It
was his idea that millions should con
sider that tomb the resting place of
Itheir own lost ones.
For Noted Dead.
The monument is a building which
will consist of three galleries, a
•library and a museum. In the first
gallery there will lie .‘100 instrumental
percussions, which will be heard for
miles around; in the second, 300 hells,
'which will peal on commemorative
days, while in the central hull there
will he an organ, to he played on
solemn occasions. In whatever coun
try it is erected it would be not only j
a ‘monument to the memory of the
fallen soldiers, but nlso a kind of
Westminster Abbey, where men of
note would he buried.
Antonio Sciortlno, who occupies the
post of director of nrts at the Brit
ish academy in Home, is a man of
grent talent and Is considered by many’
nrt critics to he the leading British
sculptor of today. lie studies not
only In .Home, hut nlso In Paris.
Though still n young man (lie Is
thirty-nine years old) he has accom
plished much. lie works quickly,
modeling with n rapidity which is con
trary to the custom of many modern
sculptors. Ilis quickest hit of work
was a mask made when he was in
Paris ten or twelve years ago* while
visiting a friend’s studio. It happened
to be ids last day in Paris and lie had
called in to sa.v good-by to a fellow
sculptor, lie had only twenty minutes
<0 spare. Seated in a corner, in an
easy chair, was Leo Textonlus, the
American pianist, who had often
asked Scionino to make a model of ids
head. Sciortlno took up a piece of clay
and in little more than fifteen minutes
had modeled a mask of the pianist.
This mask was hanging In the Amen
lean artist's studio when ltodin paid a
Tisit there, ltodin was enthusiastic at
the originality of Ihe work.
^ Wins Against 300.
The winning of the competition in
1014, offered hy tlie Duma committee
of Kieff, was not only a personal, hut
an international success, us 300 sculp
tors of all nations competed for live
years. Three times Sciortlno com
peted and won money prizes. AVUen in
1014 he won again it was decided to
give him .the order for the statue. The
decision of the committee caused great
Indignation throughout Russia.
The committee then decided to hold
n referendum. All the prominent men
and women of Itussia were asked to
view the model and decide whether
the Russian models were equal to that
of the British sculptor. They unani
mously held that the statue chosen
was best of nil the other 2fi0. Tills
referendum was taken carefully. The
written opinions* were placed in sealed
envelopes, in a sealed box and only
opened after ‘all had finished voting.
The occupation of tlie city in Mos
cow by the Bolshevists prevented tiie
statue ever being erected aud the
final award was never given to tiie
sculptor. Now an effort is being made
by the committee to collect subscrip
tion for the purpose of erecting tiie
statue.
How Murk Twain’s Friendship and
Business Instinct Was Used to
Help Old Friend.
In 1883, Mark Twain, who had his
financial ups and downs, was enjoy
ing a period of prosperity us the pub
lisher of his own hooks. The pub
lication of the "Adventures of Huckle
berry Finn” at that time had beeif
particularly profitable and Clemens,
hearing that Richard Watson Gilder
of the Century company, had been
discussing with Grunt the publish
ing of ids memoirs, called upon the
general, with whom lit' had long been
on intimate'terms, lor the purpose of
finding out liow far the project had
developed.
It soon appeared that the Century
editors desired the book, but would
not guarantee a profit of $113,(100 to
the author, who had recently ex
perienced a failure in business and
whose health was breaking down.
Clemens, whose first and last thought
was to serve Ids friend, said: "Gen
eral. I have my checkbook with me.
I will draw you a check now for $25,-
000 for the first volume of your
memoirs, and will add a like amount
for each volume you may write-, as an
advance royalty payment.”
A11 arrangement was made where
by Grant received 70 per cent of tiie
net returns and, as is well known,
the book was a vast success. The
publication resulted in receipts by tiie
Grant heirs *f about .$450,000. The
first check to Mrs. Julia D. Grant,
drawn February 7, 1S80, for $200,-
000, remains the largest royalty check
in history.
GREAT STATE COPIED MOTTO
Michigan Must Acknowledge Its Obli
gations to the Greatest of Eng
lish Architects.
The motto of the state of Michigan
“Si Quaeris Peninsulam Amoenam
Circumspice,” (If You Seek a Beauti
ful Peninsula, Look About You) was
borrowed rather shamelessly from the
inscription which appears on tiie in
terior of St. Paul’s cathedral In Lon
don, in memory of Its architect, Sir
Christopher Wren. Tills inscription
reads, “Si Monument uni Hequlrls Cir-
cutnspice,” (If You Seek llis Monu
ment, Look About You). In other
words, the great church is itself a
monument to tiie greatest of English
architects.
Sir Christopher Wren was born in
1632 and died In 1723. He won many
honors, was knighted by Charles II,
later elected president of the Royal
Society of London, and served for a
time In parliament. But Ids fame
rests chiefly oil his having designed St.
Paul’s, the most magnificent Protestant
edifice In the world nnd second only
to St. Peter’s in Rome among the re
ligions structures of modern times. It
required thirty-five years in building,
lair was begun and completed under
Wren’s sole direction. It cost $3,500,-
000.—Detroit News.
One of the Great Mysteries of Nature
Is the Migration of the Winged
Voyagers.
Have you ever arisen before the
birds aulikened you, when the dnwn
sky wits still flecked with clouds that
drifted, it may be, across tiie fstce of
ti dying moon, and heard far, far above
you, the speech of unseen voyagers
going north?
it is n straiige, n memorable sensa
tion, to look into the blank sky while
your ears tell you that the aerial mi
gration is winging past. Perhaps, with
a glass, you can pick out the specks
against it rosy cloutl or the moon disk.
Birds, it may he no larger titan a hum
ming bird, hundreds of them, thou
sands of them, all the spring, thread
ing their way for endless miles by tiie
gleam of- a river far below, tiie dark-
patch qf a mountain forest, tiie haze
and glow of a town—straight, sorno
tjmes, to last year’s nest.
When their little voices drop from
the niistt or the darkness, bearing a
message of their passing, it is a poor
soitl. Indeed, which does not thrill in
answer, nnd in answer to the sweet
twitter of some flock of tiny warblers
no less than tin# heroic clang of the
Canada geese, flying in battle forma
tion with n sound like the dragging of
a chain over some vast corrugation of
the air.—Walter Prichard Eaton in
Harper’s Magazine.
BAPTISTS REPORT
‘.ed Cross T 7ater
First Aid Makes
Life-Saving Gain
CAMPAICM H A 3 MADE PCSSICLl-
VAST ENLARGEMENT OF EVERY
PHASE OF GENERAL WORK
GAIN 5D0.C3O NEW MEMBERS
ORNATE COIFFURE OF GEISHA
Headdress of Japanese Dancing Girl
is Expensive and She Is Care
ful of It.
Probably the Japanese geisha lias
erected her hair into the most elabo
rate coiffure that fashion has accepted
for one of iter modes In any country
in tiie world. Except that it is more
ornate than that of tiie average woman
of Japan, the geisha headdress, In gen
eral structure nnd line, in Its use of
silver and gold papers, of artificial
flowers and Jade or coral hairpins, ex
presses the conventional Japanese idea
of what woman’s crowning glory
should lie like, says Asia. Site requires
a professional “knmigama” to do it for
iter. Naturally she does not feel that
site can afford to pay 10 or 20 cents
every morning for tills adornment of
the outside of her head: so at night
she props her neck on n tiny hard pil
low—in the ancient days “mahota”
were made of porcelain or Wood—and
takes care to keep iter coiffure in as
good order as site can.
The long black lmlr is oiled so that
not a single str,and shall lie out of
place, and tiie final effect Is Hint of a
carved black lacquer frame around tiie
delicate yellow of tiie face.
Janitor Objected.
One of tiie strangest ways of call- [
ing up or stimulating the imagina
tion was that employed, once upon n
time, l*y our great American sculptor,
St. Gaudens. Y'ott will find the story
in his reminiscences. When lie was in
Rome, during his student days, lie
was very fond of strolling about tit
night in one of the old Italiuti gar
dens. in which there was a fountain
which was particularly beautiful In
the moonlight and played such mu
sic as only a fountain in an old Italian
garden can play. So when St. Gaudens
got back to New York city and into
his humble little studio on the third
floor back, what does lie do but turn
on the water tap and keep it running
all day long to remind him of tiie I
tinkle and splash of that fountain |
in tiie old Italian garden. One day
the janitor comes plodding up the
stairway, nnd, discovering the run
ning tap, sa/s: “I've been pumpin’ wa
ter up here tor three weeks and won
derin’ where In blazes it was n-goin’
Young man, you’ll have to cut thal
out.”—liallnm Hnwksworth, iu St
Nicholas.
Nevada Natural Wonder.
“Tiie Devil's Poslpile” is located in
tin* Sierra Nevada mountains on tiie
middle fork of the San Joaquin river.
Tiie “pile” is a tnlle long, half as
wide, nnd 400 feet high. The odd
formation whence its appellation is
derived Is not everywhere in evidence,
cropping- out only in certain places.
The most striking columns constitute
more than 1,000 feet of its western
face. They rise over 100 feet above
the talus—a vast heap of broken
“posts” accumulated through the proc
ess of weathering. How far down
ward they extend is a mailer of con
jecture. The columns in lids amaz
ing bluff tire arranged in rows ns
regularly as the pipes of an organ.
Almost perfect prisms, they are fitted
together like cells in a lioneycomb,
and really look as if carved l>.> hu
man hands. ’Yliese columns range
from 14 incites to more titan 3 feet
in diameter. Most of them are
pentagonal, whereas elsewhere the
general shape is hexagonal.
New Scientific Discovery.
Among tiie most remarkable
glimpses into hidden corners of nature
that scientific advance has afforded
are tiie frequent discoveries of micro I
organisms in unexpected places, I
where they produce phenomena here
tofore supposed to rise from othvi
causes; For instance, x scientist it’!
Upsttla, Sweden, ascertained that in j
preparations of meat and fish con
taining, for purpose of preservation |
salt to the amount of 15 per cent
micro-organisms grow luxuriantly and
he concludes that the flavors and |
odors that are peculiar to various
salt conserves are due to the micro
organisms with which they are
crowded.
A Helping Hand.
My sister and I were on tiie boat
which was to take us up tiie river
when I remembered an important tele-
plion« message I ought to have made.
I hurried off the gangplank, up tiie
street, and into the nearest drug store.
As 1 returned the lasr passengers were
going aboard the boat.
“Where Is your ticket, miss?” asked
the white-ducked official.
Where, indeed! I dashed hack to
the drug store. Fortunately, my purse
was where I had left it.
But when I reached the boat again
the j 111111 k had been taken In.
“It's all right, ntlss,” said the grin
nittg negro porter on the wharf. And
before 1 knew what was happening lie
had picked me up ifnd thrown.iue light
ly over n foot or two of water into
the arms of a sailor 011 tiie bout.—
* Paid $20 to Hear Dog
; Bark- Over Vhe Telephone
J An American business man
t left Lis table in Muldoon’s \
restaurant, in Havana, t'uha,
1 1
* and walked to tiie telephone. *
J “Cdve me Murray Hill, New t
• York OitjN and tell tiie party J
, who answers that I wish to »
J speak to my bulldog,” lie said. J
t After » hr if Intern', guests t
| at a nearby table heard a faint J
• “woof, woof.” coming from ihe 1
{ receiver. The i-liarge was $2d. J
* “Doggone,” growled the man, •
J “that's $10 a woof.”
In the interest of Accuracy.
“You have heard what tiie last wit
ness said,” persisted counsel, “and
yet your evidence is to tiie contrary.
Am I to infer that you wish to throw
doubt on iter veracity?”
The polite young man waved a dep
recating hand.
“Not ut all,” lie replied. “I merely
wish to make it clear what a liar ]
am if site’s speaking the truth.”
* Toxicological Studies.
Poison squads are not always made
up of humans or guinea pigs. Famous
toxicologists have gained their lore
hy hiring companies of men to whom
they ,have fed many kinds of poisons.
Some of (lie men have gotten over it
but they generally showed the effects
of their diet. Other scientists attack a
lonesome-looking guinea pig or a
squad of guinea pigs and give them
enough diseases to (ill several lios
pitals. Tiny germs that cannot he seet-
with tiie naked eye are fed and housed
nnd studied for the benefit of man
kind.—New York Sun.
Effort Will Be McHe to Enlist These
and All Other t aptisto in Share
In Forward Movement Dur
ing November
Total cnnli collei tions on the Bap
tist 75 Million (' 1 paign up to J' y
1, 1922, hud reached the sutn of $u5,-
152,211.69, according to tiie general ;
Campaign headquarters. This repre
sents an advance of nearly $20,000,000
over what Southern Baptists did for ,
their general missionary, educational
ore than 325 Chanters engaged it
■ -uiving or water first aid last yeai
the result that tiie American Red
;s Life Saving Corps has set a new
mark for enrollment and the
her -of qualified life savers de
rd. The iniiuence of “learn tc
week” in many localities is re
a ■ tiie water fatalities through in
tii.n and tiie .vider dissemination
s no-ifnflnn methods demonstrated
tiie Hod ('toss representatives. Ex
cent work has been done in teaching
htr'e part of tiie American popula-
"i lioif to take care of itself in the
ator. Growing aopreclatlon for tills
ted Cross Life-Saving Service la
hawn by t!i( v compulsory instruction
idnpted in many cities for members of
the police and tire departments In the
prone pressure method of resusc-lta-
ion.
l-cE, GA.
i\GTICE.
•*° CeliLal of Georgia Railway
pa n y v.nl sell Round Trip Tick-
to ..the 11s on November 18,
-vt, for morning train at one fare!
o.ui. u „od returning unti] No!
•iiber lu, train leaves 8:30 P. M
evuiens 12:10. This is for
j-gia-, anderbilt, Foot Ball
game.
A. D. MSBET, Agent.
; ion Beta, seed Rye, seed Wheat
all kinds of Turnip seed at
EMMETT L. BARNES’.
Help to Help Others
Yon can’t “give until It hurt's”—foi
giving an American dollar to join (he
American Red Cross helps you to help
others wno ur * Hurt and who need r«
UeL
In the Hands of Friends.
“When you leave yourself in this
hands of your friends are you sur*
you cun trust them?”
“No,” replied Senator Sorghum
“Some of them are liable at any mo
•nent to go out behind my back end
dig up all kinds of needful campaign
funds in n manner thp.r I snould high
ly disapprove of if 1 knew about it.”
DR. L. R. SCARBOROUGH
General Director Baptist 76 Million
Campaign.
and benevolent work for the three
years preceding the Campaign
_ No Worms in a Healthy Child ^
All children troubled with Worms have an un
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a
rule, there is more or l ess stomach disturbance.
GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regu
larly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood,
improve the digestion, and act as a general Strength-
The contribution of larger gifts to Tonic to the whole system.*Nature will then
t-hir
Grotesques.
“She says site gets all her gowns Ip
Paris,” remarked Miss Cayenne.
J | “What»do you think of them?”
• j “I think that in spite of nil bet
J I griefs and perplexities Paris'evidently
* W'tuins u >enxe of h-utnor.”
Born With ’Em.
“1 don't see any , sense in
| mnnkey^Lhmd operation the paper
I made so much fuss about.”
I “Why not?”
“From the way the’mnn who ha
I rite operation performed* has bee
1 acting'! should say lie was horn wit
i monkey glands.” ;
religious work has been accompanied
by larger spiritual results in the local
churches, it is pointed out. For In
stance, Southern Baptists baptized I
350.000 more converts during the first
three years or the Campaign than |
they did in the three years before, ,
gained 3,000 new Sunday schools and
400.000 new pupils, enhanced the
value of their local church property I
by $33,000,000, enlarged their contri
butions to local causes by $22,390,000,
and increased their contributions tc
all causes by $43,480,490.
Baptist Institutions Grow
Some ether phases of denomination
al progress made possible by the
Campaign includo increasing the num
ber of Baptist hospitals in the South
fret* 12 to 19, with throe others un-
dor construction and four more def
intaly planned; strengthening of li
Baptist orphanages and the establish
inent of two new ones, lifting $3,000,
000 indebtedness on 119 Baptist
schools, colleges and seminaries, com
pletion and projection of permanent
improvements there in tiie sum oi
$4,000,000, and tiie addition of sub
stantial sums to the endowment funds
Over 2,500 ministerial students are
enrolled at Southern Baptist schools
Church Loarf Fund Raised
Among, the outstanding accomplish
morns in tiie work of the Home Mis
sion Board are the aiding of 1,000
churches in building new houses ot
worship, the completion of the mil-
lion-dollar Church Building Loan \.
Fund, strengthening the work among
the foreigners and Indians and the 3S
Mountain mission schools. The Board
has employed an average of 3,495
workers during the Campaign and re
ports for that period 134,832 bap
tisins, 218,371 additions to churches
2,276 Sunday schools and 759 church
es organized, and 1,403 houses of won
ship built or repaired.
On the foreign fields the equipment
for mission work has been practically i
doubled, more thou 250 new foreign' I -<=5.
missionares have been sent out, more I
titan 400 new native workers have i
been employed, and the Board hat j
entered the new fields of Spain, Jugo
Slavia, Hungary, Roumania, Southcrr
Russia, Palestine and Siberia. The
Board reports for the period of the
Campaign 117 new churches ou the
foreign fields, 2.1,723 baptisms, 21]
new Sunday schools, gain of 17,57(
pupils, native contributions of $1,003,
390.6S, and 529,642 treatments admin
istered by medical missionaries.
Another result of the Campaign it
that the Relief and Annuity Board
which is seeking to care for the aged
dependent ministers and their fam
ilies, has been enabled to double th»
number of such persons helped and
the amount that is given these bene
ficiaries. Last year the Board was
able to dispense $128,966 among
needy ministers. It has invested as
sets of $1,149,088.
Receive 500,000 New Members
More than 500,0n0 new member!
have been received lqto the lora
Baptist chut cites of the South since
the 'Campaign began, and in the hope
of enlisting ail these in the Cam
paign, as well as reaching the oldei
members of the churches who have
not share d in the forward movement
heretofore, the month of November 6
December 3 has been designated at
Re-enforcement Month by the Cam
paign Conservation Commission. Dur
ing this month it is planned that ev
erv Baptist church in tile South wil
call upon all its members who are
not already participating in the Cara i
paign anil secure subscriptions fro*
them covering the two remaining
years of the movement, and cash of
ferings to the Campaign from all th»
members. Dr. L. R. Scarborough, ot
Fort Worth, Texas, who was genera'
director of tiie original Campaign, hat
beeli elected to serve iu that eapao
Ity for the Re-enforcement program
allhough the details are being work
ed out in the various states undet
the leadership of the secretaries o
the state misson boards. It is hope' 1
to secure several million dollars i
additional subscriptions uud sex -
miilllou iu tuaa as well by Dec
>*f S. .
throw off or dispel the worms, and theChild will be
Is perfect health.*Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle
TAKING IHE PLAGE-
In the Treatment cf Colds,
Grippe and Flu, Capatone
is a Scientific Preparation,
Prescribed a n d Recom
mended by Physicians end
Surgeons.
A quick warm up nnd instant re
lief, with no fear cf affecting the
Heart or Stomach.
Capatone is highly recommended
fqr headaches, neuralgia, rheuma
tism, nervous* headache, nervous
ness, lumbago, eahaehe, and tooth
ache.
Buy a bott’e for t’Oc or 60c, take
one dose and ask for your money
back if you arc 1:11 satisfied with
results.
. ,y
Capatone is sole li- all drugstores.
No vVo—ttg jA C Chile
All children tro'ib.ed with worms have mum
healthy color, wh.cr indicates poor blood, and ns .
rule, there is m v. or l-.-s stomach disturbar.c.
GROVE'S TASTELESS chili TONIC given reguiorb
or two or three weeks will enrich the blood, im
rrqve the dig-stion, r.nd at* 23 a General Strength
eoing Tonic to tiie wb9le«y3tem. Nature will then
throw oh or dispe the worms and the Child will hi
’ll nerfect health. Feasant to take 60c nerbott'e
GREEN TOMATOES TOR SALE
Anyimi desiring green tomatoes for
I• ■ Uling purposes can rtbtain snniv at a
rcas.nnld, price by giving me their
orders. Telephone 312 or address
F. 1. FARMER,
Milledgoville, (hi.
Barrel lime, sack lime and cenfcnt
at Emmett L. Barnes’.
NOTICE
Commencing the first of Decem
ber the Ladies Exchange will be
conducted for one month in the
store of Mr. Emm e tt L. Barnes.
Those wishing to join the Exchange
will please telephone 364.
1 l-3-4t Miss Genie Claire Barn P s
Cranberries, dates, raisins, Maple
syrup at Emmett L. Barnes’.
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER—Let-
is wri 1 from dictation, careful
■ pics n. ] c of important papers,-
uything t .at may be typewritten,
■i'ss Marion Whitaker, at the “Let
•r Shop’’ (in the Singer Sewing ,Ma
tune Office) Charges reasonable.
. 1-10-4L
Flower pots, all sizes at Emmett
,. Barne’.
A car each of jime and cement at
EMMETT L. BARNES’.
Cabbage plants, and fall seed
leorgia Rye and Wheat at Emmett
li. Barnes’.
Bakers CoCoa 16c. pound, hogs
lead pure Cuba molasses and Geor
gia cane syrup at Emmett L. Barn-
Lime and cement, plaster-and firt
wick at Emmett L. Barnes’
Cabbage plants, onion sets, .seed
•ye and wheat at Emmett L. Barn-
Syrup barrel|s, new and second
hand at Emmett L. Barnes’.
New syrup barrels and meal bar*
rcls at Emmett L. Barnes’
Cranberries, the big Capecod her
ry and bulk Cocoa in barrels at
12 l-2c. per pound, Just think
12 l-2c. per pound at Emmett L.
Barnes’.
<§i
$
<§.
©
^ “I was paie and thin, hardly (||,
(iai able to go ’’ says Mrs. Bessie
^ Bearden, of Central, S. C. “I
(|p would suffer, when I stood on
C®) m y ieet > wil * 1 bcaring-xlown
^ pains in my sides and the lower
(JP part of my body. I did not rest <|§j)
' well and didn’t want anything
to eat. My color was bad ana
1 felt miserable. A friend ot (Hi
mine told me of
and I then remembered my
mother used 1o take it.. . After
wjs. the first bottle 1 was better. 1
'Ski' began to fleshen up and I re- 'iSS!
(5j|) gained tny strength and good,
healthy color. I am feeling line.
w 1 took twelve bottles (of Cardui) (P-
(H) and haven’t had a bit of trouble (i|
# since.” W
Thousands of other women (SP
(ip have had similar experiences in (jg|
^ the use of Cardui, which has M
'icz brought relief where other (p
Ijgj) medicines had failed.
If you sufier from female ail-
ments, take Cardui. It is a (P
M) woman’s medicine. It may be (f|)
rsx just what you need.
At your druggist’s or dealer’s.
QOQSGGf)© E v -• ^
Plies Cured in 6 to 14 Days
OruMists refund money •' D AZO OINTMENT fail*
p cure, ItchlDK. 1F-J, tile, dint! or I’rorrudmn
■■i.taiitly relieves Itching Piles, and yon
rrstml *!..*„ nfter first nonls-atmi
Piles.
To Cure a Cold in One Day ••
Take l.AXATIVE PROMO QUININE (Tablets I h
rtr(,> the Cpushar.-ik-adarlie nnd works off the
Loid. 1*. . GRO\ L S siguaiure ou cadi box. UoJ;
agging pains cease
when congestion u relieved
Remember: most of the pain
and inflammation of rheumatism
conics from congestion. Start the
congested blood flowing freely
and even clircnic, nagging pains
cease. Sloan’s does just this—
it penetrates without rubbing— ’
straight to the congested spot. It
warms up, stimulates the cirru-
latiun. It stops pain, bringsquick,
comforting relief. Many uses—
all in one 35c bottle.
Ki ppSloan's handy. It allays pain of
all aching muscles Relaxes and e;is< s
tired, aching backs. Ends
Halts cold in cheat,
ot congestion.
Relieves all t
Sloan's Liniment-&7/s pa in!
HELP YOURSELF
GET WELL FAST
I F you have been ill, and it seems
as if you never would get your
strength back, you need the won
derful strengthening and rebuilding
qualities of Gude’s Pepto-Mangmi-
It has helped thousands of invalids
and convalescents to get back thtir
strength, put on firm flesh, eat well,
sleep well, feel well and BE well!
Your druggist has Gude’s Pepto-
Mangan—liquid or tablets, as you pre
fer.
Gude's
PeptO'M^'ngan
Tonic and Bloc. Enricher