Newspaper Page Text
BRIGADE OFFICERS
ARE ORDERED OUT
Georgia Guardsmen Who Are Absent
from Camp Cotton Will Not
Return To Border
HIGHWAY WORK FURTHERED
Decided In Atlanta To Extend High¬
way From Atlanta To Washing¬
ton—Other Items
Atlanta—
Officers and men of t'ue Georgia
brigade on leave were surprised by
receiving notice to report by letter
or wire to the department of the east
and he mustered out of th^ service,
instead of returning to El Paso. Tho
order, issued by the war department,
and applying to ail National Guard
commands, is taken to mean that the
troops will bo mustered out so soon
that it would be a useless expense
for the men on leave to return to
their regiments.
A dispatch from Camp Cotton, head¬
quarters of tho Fifth regiment and
other Georgia troops, said army offi¬
cials there believed the troops would
ail be at home by April 1 and he
.mustered out by May 1, at the lat¬
est.
Those officers who have property ac¬
counts have been ordered to report
Immediately to Camp Cotton prepar¬
atory to muster out. All enlisted men
absent on furlough will be mustered
out immediately.
To Extend Highway
Atlanta —
The Georgia Bankhead Highway As¬
sociation meeting, held in Fulton
county courthouse, decided to extend
the highway from Atlanta to Wash¬
ington, and at once began prepara¬
tions to that end. Four commission¬
ers were appointed from North Caro¬
lina, four from South Carolina and
four are to he appointed from Vir¬
ginia. Those gentlemen are to work
up sentiment for the highway in their
respective states and make arrange¬
ments for delegates to attend a meet¬
ing to be held in Greensboro, N. C.,
In March, when the division between
Atlanta and Washington will be for¬
mally organized and name represen¬
tatives to attend the national conven¬
tion to he held in Birmingham in
April. In the meantime the states
west from the Mississippi river to Los
Angeles are to be organized and dele¬
gates selected from those states to at¬
tend tho April convention, and fur¬
ther general plans are to be worked
out.
The highway being arranged for
will, running from Birmingham to Jxw
Angeles, be tho longest in the world,
running more than ten thousand miles.
The convention at Birmingham will be
attended by the governors of several
states to be traversed, and acceptances
have been received so far from the
governors cf South Carolina, Georgia,
Alabama, Mississippi and Oklahoma.
Judge Charlton Dies
Atlanta —
Judge Walter G. Charlton, for four¬
teen years judge of the superior court
of Chatham county, is dead, at his
home in Savannah. He was stricken
with paralysis while speaking at an
anniversary banquet of the Chatham
Artillery, May 1, 1916, and had been
critically ill for several weeks.
For a while he tried to resume his
duties on the bench, but his strength
failed and he was forced back to bed.
Hope for his recovery was then aban¬
doned.
Judge Charlton was one of the most
widely known men in the state. He
had spent his whole life in Savannah,
having begun tho practice of law there
when a young man. 1 ’rlor to his elec¬
tion as judge of the superior court
he had served as solicitor general,
lie was president of the Society of
the Cincinnati in Georgia; president
of the Sons of the Revolution and a
member of many other patriotic and
fraternal organizations
Counties Plan Land Betterment
Atlanta—
An important meeting of the land
owners of Lowndes, Brooks, Berrien,
Clinch and Echols counties was held
February 15 at the court house in
Valdosta.
Prominent speakers made addresses
and plans were discussed lor the prof¬
itable uses and cultivation of the idle
lands iu South Georgia, of which there
are enormous tracts. It is understood
that owners of 2,000,000 acres of Geor¬
gia lands are affiliated with the Geor¬
gia Landowners' Association. Land
owners of Florida formed an associa¬
tion some time ago, and it is under¬
stood that the association has secured
the promise of four forage experiment
stations which are expected to greatly
increase the value and demand for
lauds.
“Georgia Day" Observed
Atlanta—
"Georgia Day” was celebrated by
the school children of the state with
appropriate exercises as outlined by a
program furnished the schools by the
state department. The state legisla¬
ture, acting on a recommendation of
the Daughters ot the American Rev¬
olution, set aside February 12 as
Georgia Day- to help inspire in the
young children of the state the right
ideals of patriotism by drawing their
attention to the early history of the
state and prominent men and women.
+ + + 4- + + 4-4‘+ + + * + ♦
♦ +
4- FACTS ABOUT +
♦ NEW LEASE OF 4*
+ STATE’S ROAD *
+ - +
♦ Lease dates from December +
+ 27, 1919, to December 27, +
+ 19C9, 4*
4> Net cash rental, $540,000 per +
4- num. +
♦ Improvements to be made by *
+ lessees not less titan $60,000 4-
4- per annum. +
♦ State to have option to take +
4" over all property acquired by +
+ lessee at expiration of lease. HP
4" Lessee will pay state and +
4- county taxes on rolling stock. +
4“ not required under present. +
4- lease, of $10,000 per annum, +
4 1 and $30,000 taxes on property +
+ In Tennessee.
4- The Nashville, Chattanooga 4
+ and St. Louis railway will not +
4- be required to enter into the +
4> proposed plaza plan, m r ha:; <r
4* the commission reserved the 4"
4- right to make any changes in 4
+ the Atlanta terminal facilities. 4-
4' + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Brown Gets Appointment
Atlanta—
Governor Harris has appointed J.
J. Brown, commissioner of agriculture
elect, to succeed J. D. Price in office
for the unexpired term ending on the
Saturday following the fourth Wed¬
nesday in June. Mr, Brown will as¬
sume the duties of the office on Feb¬
ruary 15, the day fixed by Mr. Price
for his resignation, handed in Feb¬
ruary 8 , to go into effect.
After June 15 Mr. Price will take
up his work as head of the Georgia
Experiment Station, to which position
lie was elected last October to succeed
J. H. D. DeLoaeh, resigned,
Tjiere were four applicants for the
position, each of whoso friends were
very active. They were J. J. Brown
of Bowman, commissioner-elect; J. T.
Williams of Round Oak, former presi¬
dent of the State Agricultural soci¬
ety; Cliff Clay of Americas, assistant
oommini»«ioner of agriculture, and A.
S. Chamlce of Bartow, an Influential
farmer, and an appointee of Governor
Harris as trustee of the Georgia Ex¬
periment station.
Big Drainage Project Organized
Atlanta—
One of the largest land reclamation
projects ever organized in Georgia has
been formed in Cobb county with the
aid of a government engineer and of
prominent citizens who have signified
their willingness to hack a $25,000
improvement.
Between the Procter and AUatooaa
creeks, near Acworth, 1,500 acres of
potentally good farm land have long
been only partly useful because low
and swampy. The reclamation project
organized is for Hie digging of a mod¬
ern ditch for some ten miles through
tiiis area, and its gradual extension to
a fifteen mile length.
Armor Plant Brief Up To Board
Atlanta......
Senator Hoke Smith and Congres
ment in explanation of the brief, call¬
ed upon the armor plate board in tho
navy department at. Washington, D.
C., which has charge of locating the
armor plate plant, and presented the
brief in behalf of Rome, Ga.
After formally presenting the brief
Senator Smith, aided by Congressman
Lee, presented an elaborate oral argu
merit In explanation of ft he brief, call¬
ing attention to special features to
the maps in the brief showing the
great advantages of Rome as the place
to be selected for the armor plate
plant location. •
Georgia Peach But Slightly Injured
Atlanta -
Georgia’s peach trees came through
the cold snap without great damage,
the Georgia Fruit Exchange reports,
after a careful investigation. The trees
were further advanced than usual at
this season, but the experts said the
killing of half the buds would im
prove the fruit in size and flavor.
The Jones county section suffered
from 30 to 40 tier cent damage; Key
nolds and Butler section, about 30 per
cent; Fort Valley and Marshallville
section, slight damage, and North
Georgia was unharmed.
Church To Recover War Loss
Atlanta—
A Washington, D. C., dispatch says
that the house has passed the bill of
Representative Gordon Lee to pay the
trustees of the First Baptist church
of Rome $870 for the destruction of
property by soldiers during the Civil
war.
Recruiting For Army And Navy
Atlanta—
Recruiting at botli the army and
navy stations here show pronounced
increase. Lieutenant Keller, acting on
instructions from Washington, opened
a branch station at Augusta. G. F.
Selman, postmaster at Douglasville,
has induced several young men to
join the army.
Urges Augusta For Army Post
Atlanta—
William M. Howard of Augusta,
merly representative from the Eighth
district, is m Washington, D. C., in
behalf of securing for Augusta the
'.reposed army post which Major Gen
oral Leonard Wood wishes to have
established in the southeast. From the
standpoint of location,' climate, water
and ail the facilities needed for such
a post, Augusta is the best location
in the South, insists Mr. Howard
Representative Vinson is also press
ing the claims of Augusta.
THE CLEVELANHirLI . {ECLMLANE GEORGIA.
!D1GEBTE0N, GAS
I Time it! Pape’s Diapepsin ends
: all Stomach misery in fiveU
I __JBf minutes. -W
pn
Do some foods you eat hit ha
taste good, but work badly; fer
into stubborn lumps and cause a
sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr-S Paf
Mrs. Dyspeptic, Jot this down:
Diapepsin digests everything, le
nothing to sour and upset you,
never was anything so safely quidfso
certainly effective. No difference Mpw
badly your stomach is disordered you
! will get happy relief in five rninjps,
i but what pleases you most is tab.it
1 strengthens and regulates your stom¬
ach without so you fear. can eat your favorite fffiu
I You feel different as‘‘Pape’s
i as soon
Diapepsin" comes in contact with lie
stomach—distr ess just vanishes—your
stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch¬
ing, no eructations of undigested fc£d.
Go now% make the best investment
you ever made, by getting a large'finy
cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any
store. You realize in five minutes how
needless it is to suffer frotA indiges¬
tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv,
Probably Not,
“The clock is striking twelve,” said
(he impassioned suitor. “Oh, th;H 1
might turn back the hands of time for
one hour!”
“You might be able to do tluft, Al¬
gernon,” said the beauteous maid, “but
father will be coming downstairs foon
and I’m afraid you couldn’t turn film
buck." -Birmingham Age-Herrfld,
What the Doctor Knows %
KIDNEYS MUST BE RIGHT TO
INSURE HEALTH.
Few people realize to whftt extent their
health depends upon the condition of the
kidneys.
The physician in nearly chemical all cases of
serious illness, makes a He analy¬ that
sis of the patient’s urine. knows
unless the kidneys are doing their work
properly, the other organs cannot readily
be brought back to health and strength.
abused When in the kidneys serious are neglected results or
follow. any way, According health are
sure to to sta¬
tistics, advanced Bright’s Disease, lddnev which is trouble, really
an form of
caused nearly ten thousand deaths in one
year, in the State of New York alone.
Therefore, it is particularly necessary to
pay more attention to the health ftfjheca
important organs. |
An ideal herbal compound that has had
remarkable success as a kidney remedy
is Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great
kidney, liver and bladder remedy.
The mild and healing influence of this
preparation, in most cases, ,|s soon real¬
ized, according to sworn statements and
verified testimony of those who have used
the remedy.
When your kidneys require attention,
get Swaiup-Root at once from any phar¬
macy. It is sold by every druggist in
bottles of two sizes—-50c and $1.00.
However, if you wish first to test this
great Kilmer preparation & send ten cents to Dr.
sample bottle. Co., Binghamton. writing N. Y., for a
When be sure and
mention this paper. Adv.
The Eternal Triangle.
“Mother, 1 just hate that little
Smith girl, find I am not going to play
with her any more.”
“Why, Alary, dear, wliat has that
litle girl done to you?”
“Well, she hasn’t done anything to
me, but she gives Bobby* half of her
apple every recess time before 1 get a
chance to give 1 dm half of mine."
Gently cleanse your liver and
sluggish bowels while
you sleep.
Get a 10-eent box.
Sick headache, biliousness, dizzi¬
ness. coated tongue, foul taste and foul
breath—always trace them to torpid
liver; delayed, fermenting food in the
bowels or sour, gassy stomach.
Poisonous matter clogged in the in¬
testines, Instead of being cast out
of the system is re-absorbed into the
blood. When this poison reaches the
delicate brain tissue it causes con¬
gestion and that dull, throbbing, sick¬
ening headache.
Cascai-ets immediately cleanse the
stomach, remove the sour, undigested
food and foul gases, take the excess
bile from the liver and carry out all
the constipated waste matter and
poisons in the bowels.
A Oasearet to-night will surely
straighten you out by morning. They j
work w hile you sleep—a 10-cent box ! i
from your druggist means your head
clear, stomach sweet and your liver ;
and bowels regular for months. Adv.
I Wants to Include Irresponsible.
“Let the disarmament of nations in¬
! clude inverted umbrellas with sharp
i steel ferules.—Buffalo News.
COVETED BY ALL
j but possessed by few—a beautiful
! head of hair. If yours is streaked with
j gray, or is harsh and stiff, you can re¬
j store it to its former beauty and lus¬
| ter by using "La Creole" Hair Dress¬
ing. 1’riee $1.00.—Adv.
If you can't get along with people,
try to get along without them.
SYRUP OF FIGS FOR
OILS
!t is cruel to force nauseating,
harsh physic into a
sick child.
Look back at your childhood days.
Remember the “dose” mother insisted
on—castor oil, calomel, cathartics.
How you hated them, how you fought
against taking them.
With our children it's different.
Mothers who cling to the old form of
physic simply don't realize what they
do. The children’s revolt is well-found¬
ed. Their tender little “insides'’ are
injure,d by them.
If your child's stomach, liver and
bowels need cleansing, give only deli¬
cious “California Syrup of Figs.” Its
action is positive, but gentle. Millions
of mothers keep this harmless “fruit
laxative” handy; they know children
love to take it; that it never fails to
clean the liver and bowels and sweet¬
en the stomach, and that a teaspoonful
given today saves a sick child tomor¬
row.
Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle
of “California Syrup of Figs,” which
has full directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly
on each bottle, Adv.
Educator's Opinion.
I believe thnt organized emotion can
never lake the place of brains; that
Yale’s first duty lu preparing American
iltlzens, whether for pence or war, is
to adhere to rigid standards of disci¬
pline and scholarship and well-devel¬
oped sense of proportionate values.
If our students have these things as
a basis, the more they prepare them¬
selves for the possible requirement of
military service the better. Without
them the spirit of preparedness may
become n danger; with them it is a
safeguard and a blessing.—President
Hadley of Yale University.
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen¬
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties ot QUININE and
IRON. It acts oo the Liver, Drives oat
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
Good Combination.
Ho—Of course, there’s a big differ¬
ence between a botanist and a florist.
She—Is there, really?
He—Yes, a botanist Is one who
knows all about the price people will
pay for them.—Boston Transcript.
SOAP IS STRONGLY ALKALINE
nn 01 , wiw f0n i , ,nt n , ,,, 1,,,rn out th the „
'
scalp. Cleanse the scalp by shampoo¬ ,
ing with “La Creole” Hair Dressing,
and darken, in the natural way, those
ugly, grizzly hairs. Price, $1,00.—Adv.
Caught in the Net.
"Do people ever take advantage of
the Invitation to use this church for
meditation and prayer?" a city verger
was once asked.
“Yes,” he replied. "I entehed two of
’em at it the other day I"—Tit-Bits.
FALLING HAIR MEANS
DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE
Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottle
of Danderine Right Now—Also
Stops Itching Scalp.
Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy
hair is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf.
There Is nothing so destructive to
the liair as dandruff. It robs the hair
of its luster, its strength and its very
life; eventually producing’ a feverish¬
ness and itching of the scalp, which
If not remedied causes the hair roots
to shrink, loosen and die—thou the
hair falls out fast. A little Danderine
tonight—now—any time—will surely
save your hair.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any store, and after
the first application your hair will
take on that life, luster and luxuriance
which is so beautiful. It will become
wavy and fluffy and have the appear¬
ance of abundance; nn incomparable
gloss and softness, but what will
please you most will be after just a
few weeks’ use. when you will actual¬
ly see a lot of fine, downy hair—new
hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv.
An acre of good fishing ground will
produce more food in a week than an
acre of land in a year.
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look ten years younger if you
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by
using “La Creole” Hair Dressing.—Adv
"
J'->eetrie . street car service was begun
in Matnnzas and Cardenzas on De
comber 17.
Constipation generally indicates disordered
stomach, liver and bowels. Wright's Indian
Vegetable Pills restores regularity without
griping. Adv.
The finest harbor in the world is
said to be that of Rio de Janeiro.
Brazil.
Orly One “BROMO QUININE”
To get the qfclSINE. ger.oiae. call tor fall came LAX ATIT a
BROMO Loo* (or signature o( 11. W
GROVE, cores a Cort in One Day. (So.
When a dentist is buried he lias
tilled his last cavity.
STATE ITEMS
CONDENSED
i Abbeville.—George Stubbs, the six
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. H. B.
Stubbs, accidentally shot and killed !
his eight-year-old sister here with a j
.shotgun, supposed to have been un- :
loaded.
Aibanj’.—Two boll wefevil prepared- -
ness meetings were held in Dougherty |
county. The purpose of the meetings ;
was to prepare the farmers for a i
concerted fight against the boll wee¬
vil.
Mt. Airy.—-Col. John P. Fort of this
place, died at Tampa, Fla. He went
to Florida some days ago In the hope
of recovering his health, but sank
rapidly after reaching that city, the
end coming suddenly.
Atlanta.—Fully eight hundred build¬
ers from various parts of the United
States met in Atlanta for the sixth
i annual convention of the National
j Association of Builders’ Exchanges,
i which will convene for a week.
States I
j | % Atlanta.—The United senate >
has passed the bill of Representative
Park to authorize the commissioners |
of Decatur county to reconstruct a j
bridge across the Flint river at Bain- !
bridge.
Bainbridge.—With work of construe- j
tion scarcely completed on one mag- j
nificent hospital building broken in for Bain- j |
bridge dirt has been an
other. The latter building will be j
the new home of the old Bainbridge j
j hospital.
| old Quitman.—Lon Mr. Dyal, Mrs. the 1. two-year- I). Dyal, j j
son of and
who was severely burned while at¬
tempting to pass an open fire, died
after suffering frighttfu! agonies. Mrs.
Dyal, the child’s mother, who was
severely burned while trying to save
her son, is reported as resting easier
and will recover.
Waycross.—At one of the most en¬
thusiastic meetings farmers of Ware
county have held in years the Ware
County National Farm Loan associa
{ tion was perfected. R. F. Newman
! was elected president; S. F. Miller,
j vice president, and E. J. Berry, sec
! rotary and treasurer.
Bainbridge.—If the promptness with
which a people pay their taxes is an I
indication, Decatur county is the most |
prosperous county in the state. Last j
year there were only 20 tax sales in j
the county and only nine in the city
of Bainbridge, with but three of the
iattter white delinquents.
Atlanta.- Senator Smith secured
the passage through the senate of a
bill desired by the office of the adju¬
tant general of Georgia, authorizing
the payment of 1910 appropriations to
the state militia fund, of sufficient
moneys to cover transportation of the
troops to the summer encampment of
19 J 5.
Waycross.—Every few days deals
| arec losed here by land owners by j |
j in which the residents hog raising of business. Waycross embark Several i
j j farms have been rented purchased j
or
; in recent weeks by lawyers, doctors j
j and business men of Waycross. A few !
j have in given city up their devote regular ail their business j ;
the to time
to hog raising.
Thomasville. Truckers around I
Tliomasvilie are already preparing to !
replant their gardens and '
J | in supplies of with the are laying !
seed, intention j
j | of ble getting Many to work having as early had as possi- j
report beau
j j tiful garden, with vegetables of all ;
sorts ready to use, but all were laid
low by the cold, with not a vestige
left.
Atlanta,—The Southern Express
company has petitioned the state rail
| road commission for authority to close I
j its tv. office The at Gabbettsville, given Troup is coun- | j
j reason that the
j office has long been a favorite place I
I for burglars, and that recently bur- |
; glars have carried away many pack- I
i ages, a majority of which were li
| quor.
j ; has Atlanta.—Even tentative though Billy Sunday j
engagements which
; would keep him engaged continually
for four years, Atlanta has a chance
! to obtain his services for an eight
] ! week's revival, possibly in January
and February, 1918. This information I
| was gained in an interview with the !
; evangelist's son, George Sunday, who |
I is also his business manager, who was j
j I in Atlanta.
Dublin.—That negroes are being en- ,
| | listed ada, in the the army of England, in Can- i
was statement of Congress- :
j man-elect W. W. Larson, who return- ! !
ed from a business trip to Canada, on
I which lie visited several cities, includ- !
! ing Windsor. “At Windsor,” said I
Judge Lawson, “I was surprised to see |
a large sprinkling of negro soldiers j
among the recruits who were being J
prepared for service in Europe. I j
mentioned it to the man with whom !
I was transacting business and he told j
me that several hundred negroes from I
the southland had been enlisted re- i
cently at Windsor and would be sent :
to Europe with the other troops. He j
told me they were all from my sec-!
tion of the country.”
Dalton.—Congressman Gordon Lee !
has again offered prizes amounting to
$325 for corn club winners in the j
Seventh district.
Columbus.—Contracts have been I
awarded for the construction of twenty I
dipping vats in Muscogee county, j. j
W. Knowles received the work.
the Atlanta.—Secretary state executive department F. R. j one s of j
the talk of the says'
proposed extra session
has about petered out The mail for
several days hqs been falling off and
has reached the low mark. There are
something more than 600 letters piled
aside to he read by the governor.'
WHAT IS
LAX-FOS is an improved Cascara
A DIGESTIVE LAXATIVE-Pleasant to take
In LAX-FOS the Cascara is improved by
addition of certain harmless chemicals
which increase the efficiency of the Cas¬
cara, making it better than ordinary Cas¬
cara. LAX-FOS aids digestion; pleasant
to take; does not gripe or disturb stomach.
Adapted to children and adults. Just try a
bottia for constipation or indigestion. 50 c.
Fortunate is the woman whose hus¬
band is as smart as she thinks he is.
Granulated Eyelids. Sties, Inflamed Eyea
relieved over night by Roman Eye Balsam.
One trial proves its merit. Adv.
Appropriate Warning.
“That man is as deep as a well.”
“Well, don’t go to boring him.”—Bal¬
timore American.
WOMAN’S CROWNING GLORY
is her hair. If yours is streaked with
ugly, grizzly, gray hairs, use “La Cre¬
ole” Hair Dressing and change It in
the natural way. Brice $ 1 . 00 .—Adv.
Finding Fault.
Caller—How pleased you must be to
that your new cook is a stayer.
Hostess—My dear, don’t mention it!
a stayer all right, but unfortu¬
nately, she’s not a cook.—Boston Tran¬
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
Signature of ^
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Unintentional Result.
“Tlie speech you made in congress
11 great deal of discussion.”
"Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum. “It
one of those familiar examples of
effort to take up a question to set¬
it once and for all, and merely fur¬
more material for an endless
roversy.”
IMITATION IS SINCEREST FLATTERY
like counterfeit money the imita¬
has not the worth of the original.
Insist on “La Creole” Hair Dressing—
it’s the original. Darkens your hair in
the natural way, but contains no dye.
Price $1.00.—Adv.
Intellectually Murdered.
Randolph Bourne, an editor of the
Republic, in an address recently
American colleges lire institutions
which youths are “intellectually
and the efficiency sys¬
upon which universities operated
resulted “in a card-index sys¬
of ■ education impersonal and
This indictment Is
ns to the field, but there are
institutions that- are not so—
that consult the spirit more
the intellect, and that construct
and aspiration rather than
themselves to learning and
The fact Is that the end
education will never be reached or
be substantially advanced
the spiritual dominates the in¬
in the training of the youth.
is hard for scholars to understand
the intellectual is materialistic,
it is.—Ohio State Journal.
The Older the Better.
The elderly millionaire was “fessin’
to one of his friends at the club.
you consider it any harm to
her about my age?”
“Perhaps not.”
“I’m sixty-two. How would it do to
to fifty-two?”
"I think your chances with Gladys
he better if you claimed seven¬
Remedy for H. C. L.
The price of living might not be so
high t( more people (merely ate what
they need instead of all they can.—
Leader .
You Can Snap
Your Fingers
at the ill effects
of caffeine when
you change from
coffee to
P0STUM
“There’s a Reason”