Newspaper Page Text
Household Bills Rise Steadily,
With Meat Leading Ascension.
Garden Truck, With Few Ex
f ceptions, Is More Expensive,
Comparison With Prices Quoted
This Time Last Year Show How
Pocketbooks Are Strained More
and More to Meet Living Cost.
CHICAGO, July 18 —Household bills
for table articles are going up al
most from soup to nuts. Meats par
ticularly are bound skyward, but gar
den truck, with some exceptions, also
costs more than jt did a year ago.
Comparisons are made between cur- |
rent quotations and those of 1913 ai
this season
As quoted by commission and re
tail merchants in Chicago, every cut
of meat this year ig much higher|
than in July, 1913. Sirloin steaks sell:
at retail for 32 cents a pound, as
against last year's quotation of 25i
cents; reund steaks, 24 cents, last
L year 18 cents; rump roast is 18 renbs.‘
fand in 1913 it was only 14 cents; rib
roast scores 22 to 26 cents.
The “Cheaper” Cuts.
Chuck, or pot roast according to
quality, sells for less than last year,
the prices ranging around 16 and 12
cents, against 18 and 14 in 19213, Bris
ket is 1 cent higher than last yeal.
oast beef is about the same: Choice
spring lamb is very high, a fine leg
lling for 22 cents a pound, 6 cents
Righer than the 1913 price. Chops
‘are 5 cents higher, both the specially
fine and the common variety.
. Lamb stew is the only hope of the
crdinary purse, going at 12 cents a
pound retall about the same as last
year. Mutton is cheaper—about’ 3
cents—than lamb this vear and va
ries little in price. ‘
Australian and Argentine cattie do
not seem to affect Chicago markets.
The flesh seems too fatty for the or
éinary housewife. ¢ :
Chickens Up.
. On the average, beef is about 6
\Cents higher at retail this year than
last vear,
Hens are selling for 15 to 16 cents a
pound, with 1913 prices at 12 cents to
12 cents wholesale. Broilers do not
change much. Roasters are more ex
pensive this year, going at 10 cents
to 11 cents, against 9 cents wholesale
last year.
Vea] is scarce and nigh. Good veal
chops retail at about 35 cents a
pound; last year,.2B cents, veal roast.
from 16 cents to 28 cents, and In 1913
it was 10 cents to 22 cents a pound, |
choice veal steaks, 40 cents a pouna [
compared to a 30 cents rate in 1913,
et colf welle ab-tOMIe3 fo:l7]
cents, last year's quotations being 14
to 15 cents.
Eggs Are Higher,
Eggs are higher, but butter remains
practically the same. Strictly fresh
ezgs wholesale at 23 cents a dozen,
ezgs at market going at about 19 to
19 3-4 cents. Good creamery butter
sells in South Water street for 28’
cents a pound in tubs and in prints
at 29 cents, about the same as last
year.
Potatoes are higher by 25 cents a
bushe] than last vear. In South Wa
ter street they are quoted at $1.75 a
bushel, compared to $1.50 last _\'ear.l
Sweet corn is practically ‘unquotable.
Thg only corn quoted is “eight row,”
selling at $5 a barrel—sl higher than
last year.
Tomatoes, cabbage, asparagus,
melons and egg plant do not cost the
retailer as much as they did a vear
ago, but the consumer does not bene
fit perceptibly by this fact. |
Has a Cure
For Pellagra
Parrie Nichols, Laurel, Miss., writes:
‘Seems to me if I had not obtained
our reinedy when I did I would not
ave lived much longer. I am glad you
iscovered this wonderful remedy that
vill cure Pellagra. When I began tak
ng Baughn's Peilagra Remedy, my
reight was 60-odd pounds; now it is
-odd. 1 would like to have this pub
shed and sent to sufferers of Pellagra.”
This is published at her request. If
ou suffer from Pellagra, or know of
nyone who suffers from Pellagra, it is
ur duty to consult the resourceful
ughn, who has fought and conquered
e dreaded malady right in the Pella
-4 Belt of Alabama.
The symproms—hands red like sun
rn, skin peeling off, sore mouth, the
% throat and tongue a flaming red.
ith much mucus and choking, indiges
°n and nausea; either diarrhea or
nstipation. |
There is hope. If you have Pellagra,
U can be cured by Baughn's Fellagra
medy. Get big free book on Pellagra.
dress American Compounding Com
¥, Box 587-D, Jesper. Ala., remem- |
NE money is refunded in any case
re the remedy fails to cure.—AD
TISEMENT. ¢ 1
New York Crowds Tango onSands
Bathing Suits Fast Fading Away
It's Very Different From Atlanta
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N e ez
Apoplexy Threatens Park Board Here if Mem
' bers Ever Take Trip East.
Some of the members of the Atlanta
Park Board ought to go to New York
and look over the adjacent beaches—
say Brighton or Long Beach. They
doubtless would see something inter
esting. And when they got back to
Atlanta, they probably would flee
twittering with embarrassment from
anyone who mentioned sleeves for
bathing and other little ideas which
some people are so unmannerly as to
call twaddle.
They are dancing the tango on the
New York beaches these days. The
women—or those of them whose pro
portions justify it—are wearing
basque bathing suits, with skirts that
might as well not be. And some of
them (ah, how the Park Boarders
would frizzle about the ears!) are
wearing half-hose instead of stock-
Ings—and are of the opinion that it is
l . .
‘Wlfe, Needing Cash,
LOS ANGELES, July 18.—How a
young wife when In need of money dls
posed of an automobile, given to her
by her husband. for a nickel, came to
light when Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Williams
| asked for a warrant for the arrest of
Henry Warren, a moving picture’man
Warren is the man who ‘‘bought” the
machine.
' A month ago Mr. Willlams gave a
valuable limousine to his young wife.
Mrs. Willilams wanted to go to San
| Francisco to visit friends and decided to
sell the car. Warren offered §3OO. She
accepted the offer. Warren told her he
didn’t have the money with him, but
. would meet her at the Lankershim Ho
tel and pay her. She said she wanted
something down and he gave her a
| nickel. saying she could use it for car
fare and get to the meeting place. She
| waited, but he didn't appear.
N
Asleep, Girl Walk
Asleep, Girl Walks
7 TS H
; 1€ rrom nome
.~ SUNBURY, PA., July 18.—Dream
ing that she was on her way to work
'at a factory, Miss Nora Kauffman,
18, arose at 3 o'clock in the mnrnlng‘
and had walked a mile to the plant
when a tooting locomotive awakened
her i
Frightened, she ran the whole dis
tance back home. She collapsed from
fright and exhaustion, ]
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY. JULY 19, 1914
not at all necessary that the same
should be wet.
Beach-dancing—short skirts—half
hose—and the pulpit rising in majes
tic wrath in denouncement that has
not had one particle of effect thus
!hr, Father John Belford, a famous
churchman of Brooklyn, went so far
as to say that ‘for things like this,
Sodom was destroved by an angry
God. Are we inviting Divine ven
|geance? We certainly seem to chal
lenge the Creator.”
But the danc¢ing goes on and seg
ments of the bathing suits continue
to come off; and if the Atlanta Park
Board is contemplating an educa
tional tour of investigation, to see
what sort of regulations the Eastern
beaches have for their bathers. why,
{the Atlanta Park Board would bet
ter make it pretty soon. Even now
the vista of that visit includes ner
vous prostrations and apoplexy.
Does Big Business
Selling Young Foxes
KEOKUK, lOWA, July 18.—One of
the most peculiar lines of business ever
conducted in Keokuk is that which C.
B. Pinkertcn has been making a side
line. This business is that of buying
and selling live foxes, which are shipped
here from many \Western and Southern
{ States for huniing clubs and individuals
{ in Fastern and Southern States.
t The demand for them {s enormous.
‘H. J. Nichols, of Garden City, Long
{ Island, N. Y.. has placed an order with
fi Pinkerton for 500 foxes, to be shipped
{as soon as they can be secured. Nich
iols, a New York millionaire, owns a
| 5,000-acre farm on Long Island, and
! has fenced in the whole estate with a
| wire fence that the animals can not get
‘vhrmngh Pinkerton says the greater
{ number of animals are sold in New
| York. The prices range from $1 to $3.50.
ie e S
‘ ~ Pellagra Carrier
TOPEKA, July 18.—The sand iiv
has been shown to be an agent tor
the transmission of pellagra, Profes
sor 8. J. Hunter, of the University of
Kansas, announces.
| Professor Hunter allowed a mon
| kev to he bitten by sand flies that
had bitten persons known to have
pellagra. The animal showed symp
\toma of inoculation, he says.
Translator Discovers That the
Tribal Verb “to Give” Has
1,500 Conjugations.
KANSAS CITY, July 18.—Frel
Mitchell, missionary to the Navajo
Indians of Talchaco, Ariz, passed
through Kansas City on his way to
New York to have a part of the Bible,
which he has translated into the
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Navajo language, printed by the
American Bible Society.
i That part of the Scriptures which
Mir. Mitchell has translated consists
‘ of the book of Genesis, the first, twen
ty-third, twenty-second, fifty-first and
139th Psalms, the fifty-third and fif
ty-fifth chapters of Isaiah, the books
of Mark, John and Romans, the first
and second chapters of The Acts and
tha last three chapters of Revela
tions.
Prepares Vocabulary.
Mr. Mitchell also has prepared a
handbook of 3,000 Navajo words,
translated into the English language,
‘which was the first effort to translate
‘the Navajo language into English.
The Navajo is the largest tribe of
‘lndians in the United States. It num
hers 28000 members, and they are
the only Indians in the country’ not
supported by the Government. The
Navajos are self-supporting. They
are farmers on the Great American
'Desert, practically all of them being
‘shepherds. They are very successful
as sheepmen.
| Reservation Overcrowded.
~ While the Navajos have a reserva
‘tion allotted to them by the Govern
ment, they have long since over
crowded the land set apart for them
and now occupy a territory 300 miles
wide, extending down to the Grand
Canyon of Arizona.
“The Navajos are peaccful citizens,”
Mr. Mitchell said. "“They are hard
workers, thrifty, sober and much
more reliable than the other Indian
tribes, but they certainly do violate
the commandment, ‘Thou shalt have
no other gods before me,’ for the
Navajos worship almost anything
theyv see. such as hills, mountains, the
sun, moon, darkness, snakes, any
thing that impresses them.
Tongue Is Difficult.
“Their larguage is very difficult to
translate. It Is divided into fourteen
different classes. For instance, things
round, or long, or slender, or thin and
flexible, take classes by themselves iu
the Navajo language. Small objects
that can ba held in the hand, objects
that are carried in a vessel, that
which is alive, that which may be
carried in the arms or piled up—such
as hay or wood, fluids—each take a
class. One root word expresses the
class, and the suffix identifies the par
ticular things within that class, The
verb ‘to give' has 1,500 conjugations.”
Mr. Mitchell went to the Navajo
mission nine vears ago.
.
$27.000 IN COAT OF HERMIT,
CARTHAGE, MISS., July 18.—With
$27.000 tucked away in a hidden pocket
of his coat, the body of F. F. Ferry,. a
bachelor hermit. was found by the cldpl
of a highway near here. Hlis neighbors
believed that he was poor. /
!
Registered in Maiden Name, but
Will Be Wed Before Time
Comes to Cast Ballot,
SAN FRANCISCO, July 18.—Most
people when taking out marriage li
censes are apprehensive about what
the future may hold for them in the
more or less troubled state of matri
mony. Not so with Miss Cora Smc—d-‘
berg, daughter of the late Colonel and
Mrs. Wm. H. Smedberg, who took out
license to wed Charles Norton Felton,
Jr, ot Menlo Park, son of former
United States Senator Felton.
The only cloud upon Miss Smed
berg's brow was occasioned by her
anxiety as to whether she would lose
her vote at the forthcoming election
by changing her name prior to that
event.
“How about my vote?' she anx
lously queried of “Cupid’ Munson. “I
am registered under the name of
Smedberg, and as | am to be mar
ried before election, will I loge my
vote?”
And while the bride and bride
groom-to-he waited “Cupid” lunged
into the lawbooks. He could find
nothing on the subject, however, the
question never having been put in
issue before and no ruling therefore|
having as yet heen made.
“My advice to you would he to go
directly from here to the Register's
office and register as Cora Felton.” he
said. “No one will know the difror“
ence, and by the time the election
comes along yvou will have the lvgal‘
right to bear that name. So far as |
can see, {t will be all right.” }
Same Pastor Marries
. . .
}lFlfth of Eight Sisters
| 'SAN FRANCISCO, July 18.—The Rev
'R. L. McHatton, of the Fruitvale Chris
tian Church, has just married the fifth
of the eight Sanders sisters, of Brent
wood, and he expects to officiate at
the weddings of the three others before
long.
Miss Edna Sanders, the latest bride,
was married to Claude A, Wristen, of
Oakland
Fined $5OO for
rine or
- Taking False Teeth
i g_. ~
; KANSAS CITY. Julv 18.—The pen
alty for holding up a man on the
gtreets of Kansas City, Kans,, and
robbing him of his false teeth is $5OO
A fine of that amount was imposed
on Benjamin Boyd, a negro. there.
i o
Thief Steals Shoes;
)
Gets b-Year Jail Term.
WALESENSBERG, COLO., July 18
Stealing from box cars iz heavily dis.
eouraged by Judge McHendrie, of Trini
dad, who sentenced A. D. Burns to a
term of from three to five vears in the
penitentiary for the theft of two pairs of
shoes from a car, ‘
Mother Gives Up Her
Baby to Regain Home
Young Woman Chooses Comfort With
Family to Poverty After Run-
Away Marriage.
KANSAS (%TY, July 18.—When the
alternative of her baby or her family
was placed before Mrs. Pearl Baker
in the Juvenile Court, Mrs. Baker,
without a tear, without even a fare
well kiss, gave up her babv and her
husband and went back to her family.
She handed the baby to a court at
tendant, straightened a wrinkle in her
stylish tailored suit and left the
courtroom to board a train for her old
home in Pittsfleld, Mass.
Mrs. Baker is the daughter of a
widely known family of Pittsfield and
her sister ig the wife of a State of
ficial. She was married to Baker
against the wishes of her family, and
they refused to recognize her so long
as she remained with him. Baker was
poor, and they resolved to go West
‘and make a new start. They came
‘lo Kansas City three months ago. A
few weeks later a son was born.
'~ The husband failed to find steady
‘employment in Kansas City and two
weeks ago went to the Kansas har
vest fields, leaving his wife practically
'pennliless with neighbors until he
could make some money.
~ Her family heard of her plight. Im
'mediately they telegraphed her a
ticket to Pittsfield, but on condition
that she give up both husband and
‘baby. The family had struck the
psyvchological moment,
Judge Porterfield made the baby a
| ward of the Juvenile Court and it was
put out for adoption.
\ . ;
: .
Kern Being Boomed
\
; .
For 1916 President
WASHINGTON, July 18.—Senator
John W. Kern, of Indiana, to-day de
nied knowledge that his friends were
preparing a Presidential boom for him
for 1916, Congressional enemies of
President Wilson, whose ire has been
aroused by the dictation of the chief
executive in legislative matters, it is ru
mored, have volced their approval of
the Democratic Senator and are urging
him to seriously consgider himself a
prospective candidate
Uncle Sam Burns
. .
~ $50,000 in Opium
pa O
| ros aNAELES, July 18 —Gotgeous
aigrettes, and bird of paradise plumes,
valued at hundreds of dollars, and $50,-
000 worth of opilum were burned to
day by customs officials They repre
sented contraband seizures during the
past year
S
$ : \
' Many Recoveries gi
§ From Lung Trouble '
) Fe)l man’s Alterative has restored to health
)' many sufferers from lung trouble. Read what
; it did in this case:--
4 Wilmington, Del 2
; “Geitiemen ——ln January. 1908, 1 was taken
with hemorrhages of the lungs. My physician, ;
a leading practitioner, sald that It was lung )
troutle. 1 got very weak. C. A. Lippincott,
of L'ppincott’s D;rlnment Store, Wilmington, /
Del. recommend Eckman's Alterative that /
had done great good. 1 hegan taking it at |
once. 1 contnued falthfully, using no other
) remely, and finally notlced the clearing of the ¢
! lungs. [ now have no trouhle with my lungs. é
; I firmly believe Eckman’s Alterative saved my |
oo * {Abbreviated. ) {
é (Amidartt ) JAS. BQUIRES.
Fokman's Alterative is most efficacious in {
! bronchial catarrh and severe throat and jung )
affections and upbuiiding the system. Contains
¢ no hsrmful or hnhlv-lnrmm! drugs. Accept no |
¢ subsfliutes. Eoid by all Jacobs” Drug Stores ‘\'
and other leading druggists. Write Eckman /|
5 Laherators, Philadelphia, Pa., for booklet of §
recoveries. {
LLINOIS TOWN
SETSRECORDIN
- DRY STATUTFS
No Citizen Can Give Another
Drink, Nor Can Signboards or
' '
Papers Advertise Liquor. -
TAYLORVILLE, ILL,, July 18.—As
the result of the passage by the Tay
lorville City Council of the most dras
tic anti-liquor ordinance ever put
through in the State, and possibly in
the United States, several clubs and
individuals will join tn an action to
test the valldity of the new city law,
Thirteen saloons in Taylorville, a
‘town of 8,000, were voted out May %
but prohibition failed to prohibit,
The new ordinance, fathered by
Mayvor Walter Provine, member of
the State Legislature, forbids any
citizen having liquor in his home,
and denies the right of anyone to
take a drink with any other person,
under penality of a fine of $25 to 810“.‘
Bill's Provisions.
There are seven sections to the act.
They are, in brief: |
1. No citizen shall give another cit
izen a drink, under pepalty of a §2O
to $lOO fine. |
2. No liquor will be allowed in clubs
or private homes, under penalty of a
$25 to $2OO fine. |
3. The Mayor may close any elub
which violates section 1, and that club
shall be fined from $5O to $2OO. ‘
4. No "keg parties” will be allowed.
If one person is caught drinking with
another, the fine shall be from $5 to
3100,
5. The owner of a bullding harbor
ing liquor shall be subject to a pen
alty of from $5O to $2OO.
Advertisements Banned.
6. No sign advertising llquors of
any kind shall be posted, and Tay
larville newspapers shall not carry
liquor advertising in any form, sub
ject to a penalty of from $2O to $2OO.
7. Draymen must keep books, not
ing from whom liquor is sent and to
whom consigned, and no llquor shall
be dellvered after sunset or before
sunrise. ‘
Wife Made Husband's
Successor on Board
CHICAGO, July 18.—The Sethness
house is divided against {tself In a
wayv which Mayor Harrison says suitg
him. Charles O. Sethness was a mert
ber of the Board of Education who
voted against retention of Ella Flagg
Young as superintendent of schools,
and for that reason was dismissed
frcm the board.
Now the Mayor will send to Counct!
the name of Mra. Sethness to fill the |
place made vacant by her husband ‘
Mrs. Sethness is a partisan of Mrs.
Young, and in a purely political way
disagrees with her husband on cer
tain educational subjects. ’
Daughter Gets $l,OOO
0f $600,000 Estate
LOS ANGELES,_ July 18— Cutting off
a daughter, Mrs. Minnie White, wife of
G. Earl White, with a bequest of $l,OOO,
the will of George Albert Ralphs, a
wealthy grocer, has just been filed for
probate,
The value of the estate is $600,000,
The widow, Mrs, Wallula Ralphs; a son,
Albert T. Ralphs, 17 years old, and a
daughter, Annabells Ralphs, 11 years
old, are the chief beneficlaries, i
N 'f 1
Wed 36 Years, Wife
Gets 4-Word Divorce
DENVER, July 18.—The quickest di
vorce ever grantea in Denver must be
credited to Judge Rothgerber. In four
words, and in less than that many sec
onds, he awarded Mrs. Ellzabeth Bark
ley a decree sevr—rlng the bonds that
have tied her to Ell Barkley since 1878.
“Divorce may be granted,” was all
that the Court said, and Mrs. Barkley
walked from the room a single woman.
Thief Captured by
SBAN FRANCISCO, July 18.—Marcello
Hernandez, captured by a dog Saturday,
has just been sentenced to six months
in the county jail. “Tos” i 8 the name
of the collie dog that captured him
Hernandez stole & rug from the
dog’s owner and ran. “Tos' saw him
and gave chase. He cornered Her
nandez and held him until the police
arrived. \
HAS 3 NAMES WITHIN HOUR, ‘
EOSHO, MO., July 11..—-Mrs. Hen
rietta Seigal, of this county, has the
distinction of having had three different
names within an hour. She came to
Neosho as Mrs. Henrietta Hillis. She
was granted a divorce, the court restor.
ing her maiden name., Henrletta Holl
day In a few minutes she took her
third name, Mrg, Jacobh Selgal.
!
'\ Nervous Wrecks from
' Sore Feet; Here Is Cure
! The following I 8 absolutely the surest
l:nul quickest cure known to science for
| all foot aiiments: “Dissolve two table
iu;nummh of Calocide compound In a
basin of warm water Soak the feet in
! T ¥ this for full fifteen min
i ‘ utes, gently rubbing the
; ‘e B core parts.”” The effect is
| g really wonderful. All sore-
I ‘ Bl css goes instantly and the
! A feet feel 8o good you could
; & j<ing for joy Corns and
! B callouses can be peeled
( [ B right off It gives imme
o, diate rellef for sore bun
iong, sweaty, smelly and
R plll iching feet A twenty-
N five-cent box of Calocide
[ oMI i< said to be sufficlent to
AL W cure the worst feet [t
works through the pores and removes
the cause of the trouble Don’'t waste
time on uncertain remedies. Any drug
gist has Calocide compound in stock
or he can get it in a few hours
from his wholesale house. It {s not a
Imtem medicine. Calocide prepared only
by Medical Formula Co., Dayton, Ohio
Greatest Known Foot Remedy
=
Cal-o-cide
immediate Relief for Corns, Callouses,
Bunions, Aching Feest, Sweaty Feet
3 A
OUAN SHERIE,
SURE SHOT. IN
WELFARF WORK
iMrs. Carter, of Oklakoma, Trav
- els to Get Ideas for« Corre
ctional Farm, /
KANSAS CITY, July 18 —~Capturing
bootleggers and playing the.part ofa
real Wild West Sheriff are some of
the tasks of Mrs. Katherine Carter in
her work as welfare officer of Mec-
Curtain County, Oklahoma. Mrs.
Carter is in Kansas City visiting
friends and studying the Board of
Public Welfare here. She expects to
get ideas for a new correctional farm
to he established soon in her county.
Mrs. Carter, who is probatfon and
truancy officer and a member of the
Board of Guardians, real\y serves as
a policewoman for McCurtain Coun
ty. Her work takes here to all parte
of the county, and she rides dressed
in her khaki suit and with a rewolver
In her belt. She is said to have cap
tured more bootleggers than any oth.
er officer in the county.
Learned to Shoot Straight.
How to shoot accurately was one
of the first requirements Mrs. Carter
‘fnnnd that she needd when she took
up W elfare work there. For her first
case she was sent out in the country
from lda ,Bell, the county seat, to
bring in a man whe 234! deserted his
family and who wak living in the
woods with two women.
On arriving at the place the man
refused to come, laughing at her or
ders,
“T made numerous pleas,” she sald,
“and finally 1 was forced to perfs
rate his lege with buckshot. I then
bandaged them up and had him hitch
up the wagon and we all returned to
Tda Bell, It was a triumphant entry,
for the officers had not expected I
would get my man, To-day that man
is one of the hest friends T have in
Oklahoma. He =ays that experience
taught him respect for me.”
Saves Children From Mills,
Mrs. Carter has taken an active
interest in the establishment of rural
sschools, and In the last two years has
seen 52 such schools established in
her county. She has had many ohil
dren taken fron? the mills and placed
in schools.
“Our welfare work in that county
is very hard,” she sald, "and alao
very much needed, because our popu
lation. to some extent, consists of the
descendants of oriminal refugees
from all the surrounding States who
went there because it i{s near the
' horder. The idea of a woman in this
work was verv new to the people at
first, but they have become acous
tomed to it, and I belleve T know
nearly every person in the county.”
Mrs, (Carter has such a keen de
tective sense that she can always
understand the signals of the boot
leggers and can locate Hquor that is
being brought to town.
& ;
Movies for Adults
~ Only Is Latest Plan
CHICAGO. July 18.—An ordinance
permitting the exhibition of certain me
tion pictures to “adults only” was reo
aommended by the Judiclary Committes
of the City Council. The measure was
advocated by Second Deputy Commis
sfoner of Police Funkhouser, who has
charge of the censorship.
WHOLE TOWN 18 VACCI!NATED.
LIELAND, ILL., July 18.-—John Sater
insfisted on doing his marketing, even
though his family s suffering nazn
smallpox and under «fusrn.ntlne. r
that reason the 700 residents of the vil
lnge were vaceinated.
| D L
) ,4 N E N
- /AN ER
< \ R Py
X 5 by e
¢ 7 1 » FIR f
B T 8 o
Vi Bl
5 ./ 2
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b Ly e
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; A% 4 - BNI
vg4 e > W
‘;’3 ,’7}”/:;1 P s 3
‘t ; gy, el &
_o, F % 7(;"\ -
| IR = -
fs the direct cause of Typhold, Dr-,
enter Cholera Morbus and other’
dangerous summer complaints. Fil-,
tered water is not always absolute
lv pure. Millions of tiny, minute
germs escape even the finest screen~
ca filter and cause typhold, chel
era morbus and summer come
plaints Do not lay yourself open te
the ravages of these dise.ses. A
tablespoonful of
Duify’s
Pure Malt Whiskey
in equal amount of water or milk
before meals and on ret!flflf will
fortify vour system and enable you
to resist disease germs, ‘‘An ounoce
of prevention is worth a pound of{
cure.’ Heed the advice—
. ’ i
“Get Duffy’s and Keep Well
The genuine Dufty’s Pure Malt
Whiskey is sold in SEALED BOT
TLES ONLY, by most druggists,
grocers and dealers, Bhould our
friends for any reason be unable to
secure it in their locality, we will
have it shipped to them from our
nearest dealer, express pregald (cash
to accompany order) at the follow-)
ing prices
4 Large Bottles,\s4.3o.
6 Large Botties, $5.90
12 Large Bottles, $ll.OO
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey should
be in every home, and we maXe the
above announcement so that you
may become familiar with a source
of supply
Remit by ex- ‘f“’!? ’
press order, 7 .
postoffice order, Y B \
or certifiled §i§ 4 \{
check to L .
The Duffy LAY I
Malt Whisky | \/ANE
Company A
131 White Bt., R
Rochester, Qs ".,
N. ¥ S 2