Newspaper Page Text
2
BREAKS J COLD
IN_AFEW HOURS
‘Tape’s Cold Compound” in
stantly relieves stuffi
ness and distress
Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing
• and snuffling! A dose pf “Pape’s Cold
Compound" taken every two hours
until three doses are taken usually
breaks up a severe cold and ends all
grippe misery.
The very first dose opens your
clogged-up nostrils and the air pas
sages of the head; stops nose run
, ning; relieves the headache, dull
ness, feverishness, sneezing, sore
ness and stiffness.
“Pona'a C’ol'd, is th£
quickest, surest relief knowh and
costs only a few cents at drug stores.
It acts. without assistance, tastes
nice, contains no quinine—Insist up
on Pape’s!—(Advt.)
HEED THE DANGER
SIGNAL
Your face, your skn—Jfc-our whole
body have certain signs which they
use to warn you of danger. A sore
mouth or tongue usually means
more than you think. Broken-out
skin, loss of appetite, nervousness,
dizziness —all these are danger sig
nals.
Usually they are signs of anemia,
dyspepsia, chlorosis, or even the
dreaded pellagra. They indicate a
run-down system which should be
treated at once.
Don’t take chances. Treat your
self before it is too late. A treat
ment has been compounded which
will rebuild the body and tone up the
nerve and blood and vital organs. It
is Argallep—a really successful safe
guard against wasting diseases. It
has been found particularly effec
tive in treating Pellagra.
You can get a regular |2 Argallep
Treatment Free if you will only
send for it. The people who prepare
it are glad to let you have the ad
vantage of this generous offer just
so you can see the wonderful’merits
of Argallep.
Just send your name and address
—NO MONEY—to the Argallep Com
pany, Dept. 902 Carbon Hill, Ala.,
asking for the $2 Argallep Treat
ment Free. They will send It to you
with full directions ana valuable
and Important information —all free
—in plain wrapper.—(Advt.)
Thousands Cured By
Drinking Mineral Water
Ths Famous Parlax Mineral Springs
at Bxcelrior Springs, Mo., Makes
Generous Offer to Sufferers
Every year as many as 250,000 peo
ple visit Excelsior Springs, Mo., to
drink the wonderful waters found
there. Invalids from all over the
\ country, given up by their home
doctors, find health and vigor in
the mineral and curative agents
compounded far underground by Na
ture.
Probably the most famous waters
are those found in the Perlax Min
eral Spring, and many thousands
who have suffered from Gout,
Rheumatism, Constipation, Liver
and Kidney troubles and similar ail
< ments have been permanently re
lieved by drinking it.
So confident are the owners of
the spring that this water will ben
efit you that they offer to send
•i 51 carton of Perlax Mineral Salts
to anyone who will write for it.
When dissolved in water this is
q - al to ten gallons of Perlax Min
eral water. Their offer is that It
j to be paid for only it it benefits.
The person taking it is to be the
sole judge and report results within
thirty days’ time.
If you suixer from any of the
above diseases write for a carton to
day. Send no money—just your
name and address to Perlax Mineral
\Sprfngs, 470 Perlax Bldg., Excelsior
Springs, Mo.-—(Advt.)
NUXATED
IRONS
FOR
RED BLOOMOK
STRENGTH *>»r42Es:'
ENDURANCE
EACH GENUINE NUXATEDJRON
TABLET IS STAMPED AS ABOVE
5 GOOD $1
MAGAZINES *
American Woman, (mo) lYr.) - .
Good Stories, (monthly) i Yr. o° r >r,ce
Gentlewoman, (monthly) 1 Yr. Mt 1 Q A
Household, (monthly) ..JYr. 7' „y
Farm & Home (monthly) lYr.’J'* ,U f " e
ORDER BY CLUB NUMBER 3
A Dollar Bill will do —We take the risk
Send all order* to
WHITLOCK & SUMMERHAYS
25 North Doarborn Street, Chicago
I
AN ENEMY TO- GOOD
HEALTH
Good health has no greater enemy
than constipation. You cannot “keep
fit” for work or play If the bowels
are Irregular or clogged with a de
composed mass of undigested food
from which the blood picks up dis
ease-causing lmp»"l —«s and carries
them throug’-d-.. cne entire system.
Foley Cathartic Tablets are mild but
sure in action. They banish bilious
ness, sick headache, sour stomach
<a.nd other ills ceased by indigestion.
Take one tonight and you will feel
better in the morning. Sold every
where.—(Advt.)
MANDOUNfemfe
and additss—
I 'isell only u
IX/r-ai boxes White
V I V t N CloverineSalve
. with Free pic-
aS premium ture ’ *' »S« and receive this
, M wonderful premiumand many
2. hcl 2’ 4<:c oramg to offer in catalog. Write at once
The Wllaon Chemical Co.. Dept. A 302 Tyrone, Pa.
1 c oy’a Air Rifle
This Rifle free for selling only 2C
pieces of our Jewelry at 10c each
Jewelry and Rifle sent prepaid.
Eagle Watch' Co.. Dept. 460. East Boiton. Mao
SALES AGENTS
wanted in eve r v
county to give nil or
spare time. Positions
■worth S7SU to $1,500 yearly. We train the
inexperienced. Novelty Cutlery Co., 127 Bar
st,, Canton, Ohio.
THE ATLANTA TRLWEEKLY JOURNAL.
Error m Telegram
Rings Wedding Bells
NEW YORK.—The marriage 'of
Mrs. Margaret Fitzgerald to Harry
J. Hannigan, just announced by
the bride to her friends in Port
Chester, where she used to be
night telegraph operator, is sai 1
to have been the result of a mis
take.
The m'stake was Mr. Hanni
gan’s, and he made it early last
summer while sending a message
to Port Chester from the Western
Union office in Walker street,
where he is an operator. The re
ceiving operator caught him up
smartly, so arousing Mr. Hanni
gan’s interests by her alertness
that a wire friendship sprang up
which grew into an electrical
wooing.
“We were strongly attached to
each other,” said the bride, "be
fore we met, because of the fre
quency of our conversation on the
NEAR EAST RELIEF
WORKERS SEIZED;
SITUATION GRAVE
NEW YORIx, Nov. 9. —Conditions
in Asia Minor and Turkey in Europe
are so serious that the Near East
relief will not run the risk of sacri
ficing American lives by sending
further relief workers to the war
torn areas.
This announcement was made here
today by a national official of the
Near East relief following receipt
of cables from Constantinople report
ing that J. P. Coombs is being held
by Turkish Nationalists at Samsoun.
Coombs is director of the organiza
tion’s relief operations in the Sam
soun area.
Fear for the safety of other mem
bers of Coombs’ detachment was also
expressed by officers of the Near
East relief. Besides Melville Cha
fer, a writer, who accompanies
Coombs on all his tours of inspection
through the war areas, the party
consists of five Americans, three iof
whom axe women. At last advices
these were quartered at Samsoun and
reported safe for the immediate pres
ent.
On the strength of an alarming
cable received at the commission
headquarters today the passage of
six relief workers who were to have
sailed for Constantinople on the
Panonia tomorrow has been cancelled.
The cable, signed by the general di
rector of Near East relief at Con
stantinople, read:
“Situation extremely serious. Send
no more personnel.”
The commission’s office here has
received no direct advices regarding
the plight of Coombs, whose home
is at Apalachicola, Fla. He served
with the American forces during the
war as lieutenant colonel of the
One Hundred and Sixth engineers
and after the armistice was liaison
officer in Berlin between the German
government and the American mili
tary authorities.
Other members of the Coombs par
ty at Samsoun are Gertrude E. Knox,
of Providence, R. I.; Dr. George T.
Pomeroy, of Burbank, Cal.; Marjorie
D. Pfeffer and Dr. and Mrs. Robert
H. McDowell, of New York.
GALLSTONE TROUBLES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad
dock, Box 55201, Kansas City, Mo., tells
of improved method of treating catarrhal
inflammation of the Gall Bladder and Bile
Ducts associated with Gallstones from which
remarkable results are reported. Write for
booklet and free trial plan.—(Advt.)
School Girl Shows
Scrap Book to Wilson
, WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—-A pretty
fifteen-year-old high school girl vis
ited President and Mrs. Wilson to
show them a scrap book she had
made during the president’s two
terms. It contained pictures of the
president which appeared in news
papers and magazines. The girl is
Olive Chase, a student at Western
High school here, and a daughter of
Daniel C. Chase, who is employed
by a Washington newspaper.
Miss Chase an dher mother gave
the president a big bouquet of flow
ers and spent fifteen minutes chat
ting with him and Mrs. Wilson.
“I Feel as Tho’ I Could Not
Drag Thru the Day’s Work’’
is the complaint of many a woman in the household,
office or factory.. After suffering pain, feeling nervous,
' -•/’>- k HiS
»i Km I |IB
10 cts for trial package. After taking this well-known
remedy you will feel strong and healthy. Such a change
in feelings, too —there’s sparkle in the eyes, a rose tint
in the cheeks, for one has rich, red blood. There’s elas
ticity in every movement and a spring in the step. Love
comes to every woman who has bounding health—but
wheh she is pallid, dull-eyed, languid, she has no mag
netism, nor does she appeal to any man.— (Advt.)
BuSk/Sa
SMASH! Go Prices! I
'’" ■’ , 1 am making the greatest price and quality drive of my
V? . * (SmW life, this yeai. right now. I have smashed feather bed ancUpillow
prices way down. The profiteers all over the country are trying to
WfrWWt te? p up war-time prices and send them higher. I’m fighting them.
This year I can save you more money than ever and give you better
IWMMp quality. I’ll make good my promise if you will send for my big new
Free Bargain Book, filled with beautiful colored pictures of my
\aKr new sanitary feather beds and pillows, all fully described.
'Uy Get My FREE BOOK—Let’s Get Acquainted
r* e are *“ e ‘argest firm of our kind in the world and our Factory-to-Home prices
V will open your eyes. I have saved thousands of dollars for feather bed users all over
j the country—lll save you money. Let me prove it. I guarantee satis
' faction or your money back. You take no risk buying from us. That’s
the way we do business _ Before buying any feather bed at any price, **\\
learn about my high quality and low price*. Send your name and address \ \
on a post card or letter today for th* free book and sample pf feathers. V
Agents wanted everywhere.
AMERICAN FEATHER * PILLOW CO- Desk 72 . Nashville, Tenn.
WIGS ARE THE FAD
IgBF ' 7 w w
hHV '' * * a
SffISjSSFSU • SA".-VS:. 1 • . . , . .A
f ' Um
E M ’■""a -■■■ •
*<2o
■Hh 9 - > Wr
? ; -7, Irhmmi
t
ANS?
SAN FRANCISCO.—Just because your best girl’s oly twenty-one
or twenty-two is no reason why she shouldn’t have those pretty pure
white tresses which look so well and so dignified on your'grand
mother. At least, fashion, as represented in the lobbies of San Fran
cisco’s largest and most exclusive hotel, says she can. The picture
above shows Miss Frances Shay, of this city, in the new whie wig
which is rapidly gaining the unanimous approval of the lobby critics.
The wig is pure white, well marcelled, and when combined with the
real Golden Gate complexion, is what the man about town here
calls a “knockout.”
DOWN
BUT NOT
OUT!
Buck up! Misfortune failed to
make failures of many world
famous men. In a series of
thumb-nail sketches The Tri-
Weekly Journal will tell their
inspiring stories. They won out!
So can you!
American Historian
Francis Parkman, American histo
■ian, was such an invalid he faint
id at small effort and it was torturt
’or him to travel. But he made ex
plorations and wrote many volumes
dizzy, weak and dragged
down by weaknesses of
her’ sex with eyes
’sunken, black circles and
pale cheeks such a
woman is quickly re
stored to health by the
Favorite Prescription of
Dr. Pierce. Changed,
too, in looks, for after
taking Doctor Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription the
skin becomes clear, the
eyes brighter,, the cheeks
plump. It is purely
vegetable and contains
no alcohol.
Druggists sell it in tab
lets or liquid, or send
Dr. Pierce, at Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y.,
BAPTISTS ARE TO
MEET NEXT WEEK
AT ELLAVILLE
I AMERICUS, Ga., Nov. 9.—Bap
tists representing seven counties in
this section will gather Wednesday
and Thursday of next w r eek at Ella
ville to attend the sixty-second an
nual session of Friendship Baptist
association. Rev. T. M. Calloway,
of Dawson, having moved his resi
dence outside the confines of the as
sociation, a new moderator will be
chosen at this # session.
Friendship assoeflktion, during the
past year, has paid in $30,000 of the
$300,000 subscribed by the forty-two
churches within its bounds on the
{75,000,000 campaign.
First IMptist church of Americus
will have a splendid report to make
to the association, having contrib
uted >16,000 to extension werk, or
about three times as much as
has been contributed to this work in
past years. One hundred additions
to the membership either through
professiop of faith or of re
moval have been secured since Dr.
Carl W. Minor became pastdr of this
congregation. Chairmen of commit
tees who will report at the associa
tion meeting at Ellaville and their
committees are; L. B. Johnson,
niissions; Ben Clark, home missions;
Rev. Carl W. Minor, foreign mis
sions; Rev. W. J. Ballew,^education;
J. E. Ranew, temperance;•Rev. A. C.
Wellons, deceased ministers; J. O.
Smith, Sunday school; J. H. Miers,
observance e of the Lord’s day; Rev.
E. T. Moore, orphans’ home; Rev. C.
D. Carter, woman’s work; ReV. W.
H. Lunsford, Georgia Baptist hos
pital, and F. W. Hines, B. Y. P. U.
Counties embraced within the asso
ciation are Sumter, Schley, Marion.
Macon, Webster, Terrell and Lee.
People of Ellaville have joined with
the Baptists of that city in prepara
tions for entertaining the delegates
attending the association meeting,
and a feature of the gathering will
be big community basket dinners
served on the church lawn each day
during the association session.
Mules and Horses
Parade With Tractors
As Sumter Fair Opens
AMERICUS, Ga., Nov. 9.—One
thousand mules, work horses and
farm travtors formed a parade
which featured the opening of the
Sumter county fair here Tuesday,
with thousands of visitors here for
the occasion, and the fair begin
ning under most auspicious clrcum.
The new administration building
at the Third District A. & M. col
lege here has been turned over to
the managers of the fair and hun
dreds of fine exhibits placed there
in are amply protected aaginst any
possible weather conditions that may
arise. Besides this feature, ar
rangements have been completed for
heating this building should the
weather turn cold, and visitors are
thus assured of comfortable sur
rounding during the hours they
spend at the fair.
Five other large buildings hold
exhibits, and in addition a consid
erable area of the college farm has
been occupied for tractor and other
demonstrations during the fair, and
i nthe college auditorium a newly
installed moving picture machine
will show farm scenes nightly to
the visitors. These pictures which
are educational in their nature will
be continued as a feature of the
college work after the fair closes
the students being permitted to at
tend showings of suitable films at
least two nights each week.
Ye Toll-Gate Still on Job in Kentucky
BY HAL M. COCHRAN
CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky.—Thanks
to the olden time toll-gate, the back
est backwoods of “Ka’ntuckee”—as
they pronounce it In this neck of
the woods—has at least ond road
that is a road.
Bnd of Railroad
This place is as far as any rail
road runs, down into the center of
I
fig
yLZrSA 7 rT 7
the stxte. Beyond is just hills and
dales and more hills. The thorough
fare that leads from Campbellsville,
about twenty-five miles into the hills
to Columbia, Ky.. is one of mud.
clay" anth. slate. But it is traversa
ble by auto because “strangers” have
padded the pot of gold that is spent
for upkeep.
There are five toll gates. Made
out of long, heavy wooden poles,
they hang across the road With a
weight on one end and the other
Heaviest Woman
In World Dies;
Weight, 668 Lbfe.
BRISTOL, England. Lucy
Moore, reputed to be the heaviest
woman in the world, has. Hed
here. At one time she weighed
668 pounds.
Miss Moore was born in Ken
tucky and had been in the show
business for many years. She
traveled all over the world and
was said to have received many
offers of marriage.
BEN HILL BUREAU
SELLS POTATOES
FOR. PLANTERS
FITZGERALD. Ga., Nov. 9.—-The
Ben Hill County Farm Bureau Fed
eration announces the sale of five
carloads of field run sweet potatoes
at sixty cents a bushel, the price
potato merchants in this section have
been paying for selected and graded
sweet potatoes. The sale was made
through the farm bureau to a Ten
nessee concern. The first car was
shipped Monday.
With nearly 300 active members
the Ben Hill federation has pilt
through several deals of co-operative
purchasing and sale for farmers and
has underway several larger projects,
including assistance for distressed
corn and co-operative live stock mar
keting.
At the meetings during the next
two weeks of community councils,
official membership cards will be
issued to each member. The cards
will be carried on the same principle
as labor union cards are carried,
testifying that the owner of the card
is entitled to the benefits of the as
sociation. Previously some confu
sion has resulted in co-operative en
terprises of the bureau.
Tax Receipts Slow
Tax collections November, 1920,
were $1,700 less than on the same
date in 1919, it was stated by Tax
Collector Fred Graham, despite the
fact that increase in assessments has
raised the estimated income of the
county about 20 per cent. Cheap cot
ton and resultant tight money are
blamed for the slowness with which
tax payers are meeting their public
obligations.
Chrysanthemum Show f
The Woman’s club chrysanthemum
show will be staged Tuesday, Novem
ber 9. at the home of Mrs. J. B.
Wall. More than twenty growers of
Chrysanthemums have registered for
space*, including several frorr. neigh
boring cities. Nearly SSOO worth of>
prizes have been offered by mer
chants of the city.
The Woman’s chib is fostering a
movement for the growing of chrys
anthemums for the market. Unusu
ally fine specimens are produced
locally and a few people here who
have shipped the ttowdrs have re
ceived fancy prices for them. The
show is held to stimulate interest in
chrysanthemums locally. The women
want to make Fitzgerald known as
the “chrysanthemum city of Georgia."
Following the general election here
in which eighty women cast their
votes in Ben Hill county, and the
resolution of council opening the
polls in the city election to women,
registration of feminine voters has
taken a spurt and to date 150 have
signed the voters’ oath in the county.
The Woman’s club and the Wom
an’s Christian Teinperancs union.,
through their presidents, Mrs. George*
Brown and Mrs. S. M. Whitchard,
have united in urging the women
of both city and county to register.
Few country women have registered
here to di)te.
Telephone Controversy
The controversy between the city of
Fitzgerald anjJ the Bowen Telephone
company over a new franchise, in
volving recognition of rate raises
allowed by the Georgia railroad com
mission on the one hand, and fixing
of an annual franchise fee or oc
cupation tax on the other, was.
threshed out at a meeting recently
of a special citizen’s committee and
the members of city council. . It was
decided that the citizen’s committee
should present its recommendations
to council at it? next session.
The telpehone company holds that
the validity of its present franchise,
running to May, 1930, has been ques
tioned by council, because of the
rate raises, and it needs an unques
tioned franchise. Members of coun
cil and the company differ on the
points of duration of the franchise,
the use of the streets for telephone
poles, and the franchise fee.
The telephone company asks a per
petual franchise which the city hesi
tates to grant; the council objects
to spoiling the appearance of the
city by wires and poles on the
streets; the company wants to pay
S3OO a year, as specified in the pres
ent franchise;, the city wants to as
sess SSOO a year.
Clocks and Watches
Fail to Popularize
Spanish Punctuality
MADRlD.—Foreign visitors after
a short stay in Madrid begin to doubt
whether Spaniards are able to tell
the time. There are scores of public
clocks in government buildings and
on church towers and nearly every
Spaniard carries a watch, which he
often looks at, but apparently these
lo not mean anything to the average
citizen.
An invitation to a meal at a certain
hour means that the host or the
guest will appear half an hour or
more late. An appointment for a
fixed time and place nearly always
finds both parties absent at the hour
named. An interview arranged with
an official involves usually a wait of
an hour in the ante-room. The tai
lor will not be ready to try on your
suit until at sleast two days after he
has promised to do ’so. Trains rarely
start and never arrive at the sched
uled hour. These are some few indi
cations of the little interest Span
iards show in the time.
It is either morning, noon, evening
or night -with Spaniards generally,
and of course the eternal
which never comes. The exact hour
is nothing to them, yet thousands of
them will assemble on the Puerta del
Sol to watch the fall of the globe on
the ministry of the interior at noon
every day.
end hooked under the railing of the
porch where the toll gate keeper
lives.
Driving up in an auto you honk
your horn to summon the collector
and he takes various amounts from
you that total, in the five gates.
$1.67. First gate costs you sixty
cents, because it’s near a bridge and
you have to pay a share of the up
keep of that, too. Other gates cost
fifty, twenty-five, seventeen and fif
teen cents.
Don’t Need Roads
If you are in a hired auto the
driver pays the toll but he gets it
from you when you pay your bill.
The collections are per machine, not
per passenger.
"Strangers who want to ride around
in these here parts kin pay for the
roads.” say the mountaineers. “We
travels by inuleback and don’t need
roads,”
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1920.
BRYAN HAS HIS “BEAUTY STRUCK”
WASHINGTON. —William Jennings Bryan is having his picture
painted and he was posing for Ossip Perelma, famous Russian artist,
when this photograph was taken —not for the camera man.
Ambition to Be Sleuth
Leads to Dark Threat
To Blow Up Skyscraper
NEW YORK. —Albert Bailin, whose
ambition to become a federal detect
ive is alleged to have inspired him
to run the risk of arrest as an-an
archist dynamiter, has landed in jail
though not on the serious charge he
is said to have courted.
Although he is accused of writing
a letter that seems to be modeled on
the style of Ahe anarchistic dodgers
that were staffed into a mail box
near the scene of the Wall street ex
plosion within a few minutes of the
disaster —a letter which threatens
the destruction of the Woolworth
building—the federal authorities are
convinced that Albert faked the
•whole thing.
“Attention!” the missive demanded.
“We will not tolerate any longer un
less you free all political and in
dustrial prisoners or we will kill you
this tires for good. We mean busi
ness this time all rgiht. We are go
ing to blow' up the Woolworth build
ing this time unless you free all
prisoners mentioned here above.
“(Signed)
“THE KNIGHTS OF THE RED
.STAR AMERICAN ANARCHIST
■ IGHTERS.” 1
This letter was addressed to “Post
master,” and was delivered to Post
master Patten, who turned it over to
postoffice inspectors for investigation.
The letter was mailed October 19,
and within a week after its receipt
the postoffice inspectors on the case,
having notice that nothing had
happened to the Woolworth building,
began to suspect that the author of
the letter was not the blood-thirsty
soul he seemed.
Row their attention was directed to
Albert, a naturalized citizen of Rus
sian birth who makes cigars for a
Another Royal Suggestion
COOKIES and DROP CAKES
From the New Royal Cook Book
WHEN the child
ren romp in hun
gry, here are some
wholesome delights that
will satisfy the most
ravenous appetite.
Cookies
% cup shortening
2 cups sugar
14 cup milk
2-eggs
teaspoon grated nutmeg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
or grated rind of 1
lemon
4 cups flour
3 teaspoons Royal
Baking Powder
Cream shortening and su
gar together; add milk to
beaten eggs and beat
again; add slowly to
creamed shortening and
sugar; add nutmeg and
flavoring; add 2 cups flour
sifted with baking pow
der; add enough more
flour to make stiff dough.
Roll out very thin on
floured board; cut with
cookie cutter, sprinkle
with sugar, or put a rai
sin or a piece of English
walnut in the center of
each. Bake about 12 min
utes in hot oven.
Cocoa Drop Cakes
4 tablespoons shortening
J cup sugar
1 egg
% cup milk
1% cups flour
3 teaspoons Royal
Baking Powder
% cup cocoa
% teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
Cream shortening; add
sugar and well-beaten
beat well and add
milk slowly; sift flour,
baking powder, salt and
cocoa into mixfure; stir
until smooth, add vanilla.
Put one tablespoon of
batter into each greased
muffin tin and bake in
moderate oven about 20
minutes. Cover with boil
ed icing.
g WATCH, CHAIN AND TWO RINGS
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THE WILSON CHEMICAL CO„
g|G CASH COMMISSION TO AGENTS ~ Dept. L 225 Tyrone. Pa.
Z' famous Rosebud Salve at 25c per box. Rosebud
Salve has been giving relief and satisfaction
for 25 years to millions of users for burns,
--■ zy -J\—tetter, sores, piles, catarrh, corns, bun-
2 "?X\ — ionß - etc - Easy to sell. We send 12
//$> ■ j boxes postpaid on credit, trust you nn-
f f bl sold. Big catalog of other prem-
Lr iums. Jewelry. Lace Curtains. Phono-
»,\ < 9’ 1,1 lUI graphs, etc., sent FREE with salve.
JgRITE today OCT OTARTBO.
Perfume Company. Box 51 Woodsboro, Maryland
living in Brooklyn, the inspectors de
clined to say. Ben A. Matthews, as
sistant United States attorney, as
serted however, that the inspectors
had evidence that Albert mailed the
letter even if he did not write it,
and that it was his fell purpose by
so doing to swindle the government
of the United States, the department
of justice, the postoffice’ department,
and the pojice department of the city
of New York. >
It was Albert’s intention, the fed
eral auhorities say, to turn up op
portunely with information about the
plot to blow up the Woolworth build
ing and offer to turn state’s evidence
in return for a job as' agent of the
department of justice. Aspiring Al
bert, they say, made an appointment
to meet federal detectives in front
of the federal building in pursuance
of his plan.
Albert was not kept waiting. Pop
office Inspector Honvery was at the
place* appointed and as soon as Albert
joined him with an air of furtive im
portance the inspector placed him un
der arrest. It scarcely was possible
for the most astute detective to de
tect the embryo department of jus
tice agent in the crestfallen prisoner
whom United States Commissioner
Hitchcock held in $5,006 bail for fur
ther examination. At the hearing Al
bert denied knowing anything aboW
the letter.
Brightens Rugs
When sweeping rugs, throw a
handful of coarse salt on the rug
before sweeping. This will brighten
the colors of the rug and keep away
Insects. .\ , • ‘ 1
BAKING
POWDER
Pure
Made from Cream of Tartar,
derived from grapes.
- COOK BOOK FREE
The new Royal Cook Book
containing 400 delightful re
cipes, will be sent to yon
free if yon will send your
name and address.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.
115 Fulton Street, New York Oity.
i- O 1
V- ■’ ? ■<: •-
Resinol,
healed that
Skin trouble
When you think what a source of an*
noyance and suffering that eczema hr-*
been to me in the past three years, da
you wonder I am thankful that the doc
tor prescribed Resinol? The very first
time I used it, the itching stopped and
in a surprisingly short time the erup
tion began to disappear.
Resinol Soap should usually be used with Resinol
Ointment to prepare the skin tn receive the Rsstnol
medication. Resinol Soap and Resinoi Ointment
are sold by all druggists. Rcunol Soup helpt
clear floor complexions.
II WUIMC— —
“Only One Thing
Breaks My Cold”
‘‘That’s Dr. King's New Dis
covery, for Fifty Years
a Cold-Breaker”
TIME-TRIED for fifty years and
never more popular than today.
Nothing but the relief it gives from
stubborn old colds, and on-rushing
new ojies, grippe and throat-torturing
coughs could have made Dr. King’s
New Discovery the standard remedy it
ts today. No harmful drugs.
Always reliable, and good for ths
whole’family. Has a convincing, heal
ing taste with all its good medicinal
qualities. At all druggists, 60 cents,
$1.20 a bottle.
For colds
New Discovery
The Results of Constipation
are sick headaches, biliousness, sallow
skin, waste matter in the intestinal
system. Correct this health-under
mining condition by taking Dr. King’a
Pills. Feel good every day. Keep
the system clean and virile. Same
old price, 25 cents. All druggists,
rx Prompt! Won’t Gripe
’ WATCH
THE BIG 4
Stomach-Kidneys-Heart-Liver
Keep the vital organs healthy by
regularly taking the world’s
standardremedy for kidney, liver,
bladder and uric acid troubles—
GOLD MEDAL
The National Remedy of Holland for
centuries and endorsed by Queen
Wilhelmina. All druggists, three sizes.
Look for the name Gold Medal on every
box and accept no imitation
RHEUMATISM
RECIPE
I will gladly send any Rheumatism suf
ferer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free
that Completely Cured me of a terrible at
tack of muscular ami inflammatory Rheu
matism of long standing after everything
else I tried* had failed me. I have given
it to many sufferers who believed their
cases hopeless, yet they found relief from
Their suffering by taking these simple berbe.
It also relieves Sciatica promptly, as well
ns Neuralgia, and is a wonderful blood puri
fier. You are most welcome to this Herb
Recipe if you will send for It at once. 1
believe you will consider it a God-Sen4 after
you have put it to the test. There is noth
ing injurious contained in it, and you can
see for yourself exactly what you are tak
ing. I will gladly send this Recipe—abso
lutely free—to any sufferer who will send
name and address, plainly written.
W. G. SUTTON. 2650 Magnolia Ava.
Los Angeles, California.
Moving Picture Machine Given
Boys, here is your
A chance to have a
NFW Fill real moving picture
■ Mnnri wwnsi 0 machine with film
I jsf&TZ complete. Simply
sei'Ji boxes famou*
WhiteCloverine
V, I gl Bf a Salve a'ate withFrea
St 1 B pictures. according t<
® JSC s ’*-’ offerlnnremnimratalog,
* —LsL'—-Befir'tinynurtown
The Wilson Chemical Co.. Dept. MP Ts Tyr®««. P%
26-Piece Silveroid Set Given
Full size for family
use; will never tar.
nish; beautiful
pattern. Simply sell
~ 40 packets Garden
Seeds all oc. Ma n y
gefey.W given. Write today.
The Wilson Seed Co., Dept. 3 54 Tyrone, Pa.
1 Money back without question
\l if HUNT’S Salve fails in th*
—ll treatment of ITCH. ECZEMA,
AbSr RINGWORM, TETTER or
f■ I P/ otlie r itching skin diseases.
I AJ f 1 Try a75 cent box at our risk.
V fn Sold hv nil druggists. •
TfTt
If you have Epilepsy, Fits, Falling Sick
ness or Convulsions —no matter how bad
write today for my FREE trial treatment.
Used successfully 25 years. Give age and
explain case. Dr. C. M. Simpson, 1685 .West
44th St., Cleveland. Ohio.
f Walking Doll FREES
This pretty Walking Doll is a foot tail,
and you can make her walk as fast a>.
you wish-and her feet really movt. She
has a lovely face, becoming dress auc>
bonnet in bright calore, and you can earrjr heat
or make her walk Just as you please. Giveai
for selling only 15lk'we)f t y Novelties at lOe ea»
Write today COtifMBIA MOVKLTY CO.. Dept,
3OSEAST BOSTON. MASS.
Bracelet, Locket, Neck Chain
Complete outfit given fori
lei ling only 40 packets Ga r-1
den Seeds at 10c. Write!
Quick. '
Wilson Seed Co.
Tyrone, Pa.