Newspaper Page Text
“To Insure a Safer World for
Our Children.
"Since the beginning of our govern¬
ment ft has been the law of this coun¬
try that every able-bodied mule citi¬
zen and declarant between eighteen
and forty-five is subject to be summon¬
ed to Its defense.
“The occasions have happily been
rare when such a summons has had
to be issued. We face the need now.
‘‘Over 10,000,(JUKI of our men of fight¬
ing age have already registered for se¬
lection for service. Out of this num¬
ber many have been chosen, trained,
and sent to battle across the sea. while
others are In training or on the way.
They have made us very prouti of
them, these splendid soldiers, and some
have already given their lives for us.
W<* shall not fail to support them and
to re-enforce them.
“The remaining IK,000,000 are now
called upon to register for selection.
The only purpose of this extension of
tlie selective service law is lo bring a
speedier end to the war and to insure
a safer world for our children.
“Since tlie enemy lots compelled the
arbitrament of force, force let it be,
force overwhelming. The registra¬
tion of .the entire man-power of tlie
United States will lie our unmistaka¬
ble pledge to immunity that democracy
Is to be tlie regime of the future.”
"NEWTON O. BAKER,
“Secretary of War.”
WHO MUST REGISTER
All mule persons must register who
shall have attained their eighteenth
birthday and shall not have attained
their forty-sixth birthday on or before
the day set by the president for regis¬
tration. The yniy exceptions are:
(A) Persons who, prior to the day
set for the registration by the presi¬
dent, have registered either under tlie
terms of the act approved May 18, 15*17,
or under the terms of the public reso¬
lution of congress approved May 'JO.
1918, whether called for service or
not;
(S) Officers and enlisted men of (he
regular army, officers appointed, and
men of the forces drafted, under the
provisions of the act approved May 18,
1917; officers and enlisted men of the
National Guard while In tlie service of
the United States; ami the officers of
the officers’ reserve corps and enlisted
reserve corps while in the service of
the United States; and
(C) Officers and enlisted men of tlie
navy and marine corps, and officers
ami enlisted and enrolled men of the
naval reserve force and marine corps
reserve while in the service of tlie
United States.
HOW TO ANSWER QUESTIONS ON
REGISTRATION CARD AND IN
STRUCTIONS FOR REGIS¬
TRARS.
Detailed Information for Making Out
Registration Card.
Both Registrars and Registrants
will he guided by the instructions
herein contained. The Registrar
Should study them before Registration
Day, and the Registrant should read
them carefully and prepare tlie an¬
swers in ids mind before going to the
Registration Table. The answers to
the questions shall be given and the
entries made in the numerical order
stated. All answers will be written
on the Registration Card In Ink by the
Registrar, who should be careful to
spell all names correctly and (o write
legibly.
I Do not write on. mark, or otherwise
mutilate the Instructions. Do not remove
them]
fin some spaces as Indicated in the di¬
rections, checks will be used to Indicate
the answers, a device which is designed
to save the time of the Registrars.]
REGISTRATION CARD.
SERIAL NUMBER—Registrars shall
leave this space blank.
ORDER NUMBER.—Registrars shall
leave this space blank.
1. STATE YOUR NAME AS INDI
OATED SPKLI, OUT EACH NAME IN
FULL.
2. permanent HOME ADDRESS
-
This means whore you have your perma¬
nent home NOW. not the place where
you work, nor the place where you were
born, unless that Is your permanent home.
Be prepared to give it this way: “100
Woodward Ave., Detroit, Wayne Countv
Mich Smith County. or “R. F. D. No. 2. Jonesville.’
Pa.” If the registrant
llvos in an apartment house, he should
state the number of the apartment In
which he lives. If his address Is “in cure’
of someone, this should he stated
3. AGE IN YEARS State your age to¬
day in YEARS oniv. Disregard additional
months or days. Re prepared to say "?a"
or “38.” not “34 years. 3 months.” or the
like.
4 DATE OF BIRTH.—If you do not
remember the year, start to answer as
you would if some one asked you your
birthday, as “October 12 “ Then say, “On
my birthday, this year, I will he (or was)
------- years old.” The registrar will then
fill in the year of birth. This may he ob¬
tained by the registrar by subtracting the
: fe in years on this year's birthday from
3 >18.
RACE.
5. WHITE.—If you are white, the regis¬
trar will place a check in this spate
and proceed to the determination of your
citizenship, leaving spaces 6. ?, S and 9
blank.
6. NEGRO —If you are a negro, the
registrar will place a check in this
space and proceed to the determination
of your citizenship, leaving spaces 5, 7,
S and 9 blank.
7. ORIENTAL.—If you are an oriental,
the registrar will place a check in
this space and proceed to the determina¬
tion of your eftlzermhip, leaving spaces £,
6. 8 and 9 blank.
INDIAN.
8. CITIZEN.—If you are a citizen In¬
dian born in the United States, the regis¬
trar will place a check in this space
and proceed to space 16, leaving spaces 5,
6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15 blank. An
Indian born in the United States is a citi¬
zen if (i) he, or his father or mother
prior to his birth or before he attained
the age of 21, was allotted land or re
ceived a patent in fee prior to May 8, 1906:
(2) if he was allotted land subsequent to
May 8, 1906, and received a patent in fee
to his land; (2) if he was residing in the
old Indian Terltory on March 3, 1901; (4)
If he lives separate and apart from his
tribe and has adopted the habits of civil¬
ized life.
9. NONCITIZEN.—If you are a non¬
citizen Indian born in the United States,
the registrar will place a check in
this space and proceed to space 16, leav¬
ing spaces 5, 6, 7, 8. 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15
blank. An Indian born in the United
States shall be classed as a noncitizen In¬
dian unless he falls within one of the
classes of citizen Indians described In
space 8.
UNITED STATES CITIZEN.
10. NATIVE BORN.-—If you are a na¬
tive-born citizen of the United States,
the register will place a check in this
apace and proceed to space 3 6, leaving
spaces 11. 12. 13. 14 and 15 blank. If
you were born In the United States,
including Alaska and Hawaii, you United are
a native-born citizen of the
States irrespective of the citizenship of
your parents. Any inhabitant of Porto
Rico, who was a Spanish subject on
April 11. 1899, and w ho resided in Porto
Rico on that date, and continued to reside
therein until April 11. 1900. is held to
be a citizen of porto Rico, except such
Inhabitants, natives of the Spanish pe¬
ninsula. who elected to preserve their
allegiance tp Spain on or before April
11. 1900, by making a declaration, be¬
fore a court of record, of their decision
to do so. Any citizen of Porto Rico, as
above defined, and any native of Porto
Rico who vvusf temporarily absent from
the island on April 11, 1899. and has
since returned, and is not a citizen of
any foreb; \ country, is held to be a
citizen of the United States, provided
he did not elect to retain his political
status by making declaration under
oath of 1.. decision to do so within six
months after March 2. 1917. if you
were born abroad, you are still a citi¬
zen of the United States if your father
was a citizen of the United States at
the time yon were born, unless you
have expatriated yourself.
11. NATURALIZED.—If you are a
naturalized citizen of yie United States,
the register will place a check in this
space and proceed to space 16. leaving
spaces 10, 12, 13, 14 and 15 blank. You
are a naturalized citizen if you have
completed your naturalization, that is,
if you have “taken out final papers.”
But you are not a citizen if you have
only declared your Intention to become
a citizen (that is. If you have only
"taken out first papers”); in the latter
case you arc* a declarant.
12. CITIZEN BY FATHER’S NATU¬
RALIZATION BEFORE REGISTRANT'S
MAJORITY.—If you are a citizen by your
lather’s naturalization (or your mother’s
naturalization in case your father died)
before you attained your majority, the
registrar will place a check in this
space and proceed to space 16, leaving
spaces 10, 11. 3 3. 14 and 15 blank. The
children of persons who have been duly
naturalized under the law's of the Unit¬
ed Stages, being muier the age of
twe*nty-one at the tin# of the naturali¬
zation of their parents, are, if dwelling
in the United States before attaining
their majority, considered as citizens
thereof. (Sec. 2172. U. S. Rev. Stat.^
and 34 Stat. L., pt. 1, p. 1228.)
ALIEN.
13. DECLARANT.-If you are a de¬
clarant alien, the registrar will place a
check in this space and proceed to
space 15. leaving spaces 10, 11, 12 and 14
blank. You are a declarant if. although
a citizen or subject of some other coun¬
try, you have declared before a natural¬
ization court your intention to become a
citizen of the United States. This Is re¬
ferred to as “taking out first papers.”
14. NONDECLAUANT.-If you are a
noruleclitrant alien, the registrar will
place a check in this space and pro¬
ceed to space 15, leaving spaces 10, 11. 12
and 13 blank. You are a nondeclarant
alien if you do not fall within one of the
classes described in spaces 10, 11, 12 and 13
and are not au Indian. In other words,
you are a nondeclarant alien If you are a
citizen or subject of some other country
than the United States and have not de¬
clared before a naturalization court your
intention to become a citizen of the Unit¬
ed States, that is, have not “taken out
first papers.”
15. This need be answered only by de¬
clarant and nondeclarant aliens. Remem¬
ber that a declarant Is not yet a citizen
of the United States. If you are an alien
of either class, state the name of your
country, which the registrar will write in
this space, for example, “Great Britain,”
“France,” “Italy.” State also the name
of the subdivision of your country In
which you were ordinarily resident be¬
fore proceeding to the United States,
which will be written by the registrar in
parentheses after the name of your coun¬
try, as “Great Britain (Scotland).” In
the case of Czeeho-Slovaks, German or
Austrian Poles, Alsatians, Lorrainers,
and persons of like status, the reg¬
istrant may answer “Czecho-Slovak,
claimed as subject of Austria-Hun¬
gary,” “Pole claimed as subject
of Germany or Austria-Hungary.”
“Alsatian claimed as subject of Ger¬
many,” etc., and Such an entry shall be
made by the registrar.
If not a citizen of the United States,
of what nation are you a citizen or
subject?
16. PRESENT OCCUPATION. - This
means your present occupation, trade, or
employment, which the registrar will en¬
ter in this space. Do not state what you
once did, nor what you have done most
of the time, nor what you are best fitted
to do. Simply state what your job is
right now. State briefly, as “farmer,”
“miner.” “student,” “laborer” (on farm,
in rolling mill, in automobile, wagon, or
other factory), “machinist in automobile
factory,” etc. If you hold an office under
State or Federal Government, name the
office vou hold.
17 EMPLOYER’S NAME.-If you are
working for an individual, firm, corpora¬
tion. or association, state its name. If
in business, trade, profession, or employ¬
ment for yourself, so state, if you are an
officer of the State or Federal Govern¬
ment. say whether your office is under
the United States, the State, the county,
or a municipality. The registrar will
make an appropriate entry.
1$.- PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT OR
BUSINESS.—This means where you work.
Give the number and name of street first,
then city or town, then county and Shite
or R. F. D number first, then town, then
county and State. The registrar will
make the entries.
NEAREST RELATIVE.
19. NAME—-If you are married and
your wife is living, her name should be
stated. If you are single or your wife is
dead, you should state the name of your
nearest blood relative If you are not
married and have r.o blood relative, the
name of a close friend should be stated.
The registrar will make the entry.
20 . ADDRESS.—In stating the address,
give the number and name of the street
first, then the city or town, then the
county and State, or R F. D. number
first, then post office, then county and
State The registrar will make the en¬
tries.
rm: «mummy vmmm PLEVELAN’D. GEORGIA
LOOK AT TONGUE! THEN GIVE
FRUIT LAXATIVE FOR STOM¬
ACH, LIVER, BOWELS.
"CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS"
CAN'T HARM CHILDREN AND
THEY LOVE IT.
Mother! Your child isn’t naturally
cross and peevish. See If tongue Is
coated;'this is a sure sign the little
stomach, liver and bowels need a
cleansing at once.
When listless, pale, feverish, full of
cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn’t
eat, sleep or act naturally, has stom¬
ach-ache, diarrhoea, remember, a gen¬
tle liver and bowel cleansing should
always be the first treatment given.
Nothing equals ‘‘California Syrup of
Figs” for children’s ills; give a tea¬
spoonful, and in a few hours all the
foul waste, sour bile and
food which is clogged In the bowels
passes out of the system, and you,
have a well and playful child
All children love this harmless, deli¬
cious “fruit laxative,” and It never,
fails to effect a good “Inside” cleans¬
ing. Directions for babies, children
of all ages and grown-ups are
on the bottle.
Keep it handy in your home. A little
given today saves a sick child tomor¬
row, but get the genuine. Ask your
druggist for a bottle of “California
Syrup of Figs,” then see that it is
made by the "California Fig Syrup
Company.”—Adv.
Another Optimist.
The optimistic man had been ejected
from bis room by the irate landlady.
Out he went Into the street, Ills be¬
longings sailing after him. The white,
; blinding snow whirled in stinging
i musses,, ami. the* wintry nd shrieked
sited* pirttined through the trees . and
wires.
The optimistic man sat him ira
I trunk to listen to the complaint of the he'
: elements and to consider where
j should go. He recalled a blistering
j week of a past August. As a cutting
blast almost whirled him from his seat
and blew a hatful of snow down his
neck lie murmured gratefully: “Will.
there seems to be a good breeze stlr
ring, anyhow.”
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Luca*
County— ss. ,
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney
& “■ Co., VW., uuiin, doing business In the City ____ w of To- _____
ledo, County and State aforesaid, and that
said firm wit! pay the sum of ONE HUN
DKG!) DOLLARS for any case of Catarrh
that cannot be cured by the use of
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE.
FRANK J, CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed tn
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D. 1886.
(Seal) A. W. Gleason. Notary Public.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is tak¬
en Internally and acts through the Blood
on the Mucous Surfaces of the System.
Druggists, 75c. Testimonials free.
E. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
A German Mark.
“Fop?” “Well, Junior?" “What Is n
German mark?.....There are two kinds.”
“Oh!” “One is u coin—" “Yes
“And the other is any poor boob who
is obliged to stand for tlie kaiser’s gov¬
ernment.”—Youngstown Telegram.
United States government recently
ordered $145,000,000 worth of meat in
Chicago.
ASTHMADOR
JOTEHTS * RELIEVES
HAY FEVER
Begin ASTHMA
Treatment NOW
All Druggists Guarantee
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Dinolved in -wn'er for douche* atop*
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam¬
mation. Recommended by Lydia E.
Pinkham Med. Co, for ten year*.
A healing wonder for nasal catarrh,
sore throat and sore aye*. Economical.
Has extraordinary dean sing and germicidal power.
SanspieJFree. 50c. Toiikt ail druggists, or postpaid by
Parfoc Company, Bcetoo, ton. Mess.
-------—-
SWAMP- Is not recommended for
everything: but if you
ROOT Diaauer trouble it may
, be V Hind sust the medicine you need. At
druggists in large and medium size bot
ties. You may receive a sample size bot
tie of this reliable medicine by Parcei
Post, also pamphlet telling Co about it.
Address ress Dr. Dr. Kilmer Kilmer & , Binghamton,
X Y . and enclose ten cents, also men¬
tion this paper.
Agents—Make S20 a Day SmSk™ 7
KOROZt Patch, for mending holes :tt aatomoiji.
and mo to re j cle inner tubi SoTo
d lie-1 *-l with w tn a a Vulcan Vulcau zer zer cannot cannot be beau
:al. Sample KOKOZO
and a v mcaniser FSEK. Write today. Hen¬
derson Brothers, 13 N. Taylor St., oJainesviile,Tex.
^ ^nOADCV 1 ynwi ^ * mSTWENT. Soon swelling quick and relief. short
removes
8p ^ • breath. it Trial Never treatment heard of sent it* eqaal F3CC. for by dropaji
& cm
Write to DR. THOMAS £. GREEN
20. CHATSWOIKTH,
\ With fingers! Corns and cal- i
• luses lift off. No pain! !
j
Magic! Just drop a little Freezone
on that touchy corn, Instantly it stops
aching, then you lift the corn off with
the fingers. Truly! No humbug!
Try Freezone! Your druggist sells a
tiny bottle for a few cents, sufficient to
rid your feet of every hard corn, soft
corn, or corn between the toes, and
calluses, without one particle of pain,
soreness or irritation. Freezone is the
| discovery of a noted Cincinnati genius.
-Adv.
BRAVERY DEPENDS ON HEART
] Reason Why It Is Manifestly Unjust tu
Condemn Soldier for Physical
) Cowardice.
! “Bravery," said an army doctor, “is
a question of the heart.
“Suppose you’re strong and healthy.
Your heart heats 72 strokes to the min¬
ute. Well, then, in a gas tank the dan¬
ger will slow your heart twelve strokes.
This won’t inconvenience you. With
your heart still at sixty you’ll feel
strong and resolute. You'll be a good
soldier.
“But suppose you’ve got a poor
I heart, a fifty-flve-to-the-minute one.
! Then, when the gas tank comes, if
j | your heart slows down twelve strokes,
you're prostrated, for a forty-three
heart-bent isn't enough—you are liable
to faint under it.
“Or again, you may have an excita¬
ble heart. You bear tlie order to go
over tlie top with fortitude, tint the
excitement sends your heart leaping
up to 120. What good is your forti¬
tude then? No good at all. With a
120 heart you can only shake and
cower.
“Yes, bravery is a question of the
heart and that is why we should only
enlist strong young men. Otherwise
we’ll he shooting chaps for cowardice
as unjustly as if we shot them for hav¬
ing rheumatism or red hair."
Get New Kidneys
The kidneys are the most overworked
organs fail of the human body, and when they
in their work of filtering out anil
throwing oft the poisons developed in tlie
system, things begin to happen
One of the first warnings is pain or stiff
ness in the lower part . of the back; highly
colored f'nlnrFtl ... iirino* urine; Isvua loss nf of appetite; ntinoi if o- in/invna. indiges¬
tion; These irritation, or even indicate stone in the mad¬
der. symptoms a condition
that may lead to that dreaded and fatal
malady, is said to Bright’s be no cure. disease, for which there
J)o not delay a minute. At the first in¬
dication of trouble in the kidney, liver,
bladder or urinary organs start takin, ,1
Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules
StS-Tif
You can almost certatnlv find immediate
relief in Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules.
For more than 200 years this famous prep
a ration has been an unfailing remedy for
all kidney, bladder and urinary troubles,
miles great-grarfdmoUu'r’lweffi each day will keep toned ™ ££ and
feeling you up
line. Get it at any drag store, and
bl m a~’ i
sure you get the GOLD MEDAL brand.
’None other genuine. In boxes, three
sizes. -Adv.
Catastrophe. t
“There is a little mound of some
white substance on the pavement.”
“So I see.”
“A gentleman is carefully scooping
it up, indulging meanwhile in loud la¬
mentations.”
“Why shouldn't he lament? He
dropped his month's allowance of su¬
gar.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Examine Important to Mothers
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
Mock Modesty.
| “Why are you putting on so much
rouge, dear?” ;
“Oh, Jack is taking to !
me some
revue or other, and I want him to think
I’m blushing." i
i
No Worms in a Healthy Child
All children troubled ed with —- worms — have *---- an
healthy color, which indi leaves poor blood, and a
JPifeJSSfil,!? eh distnr!
prove the digestion, and act as a Cn^neral Streugth- ;
ening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
throw off or dispel the worms, and tbe Child wi:: «w
in perfect health. Pleasant to tahe. 6Uc per bott:e.
Carpentry is about the only trade
women have not entered into in Eng¬
land.
Your Uranulaled Eyelids,
Eyes inflamed by expo¬
Eyes sure to Sun, Dos] and Wind
quickly relieved by Murine
EyeRemedy. No Smarting,
Your Bruggists just Eye Comfort. At
or by mail 60c per Bottle,
For Bask of ihe Eye free write h->.
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago*
BRITISH SMASH
HINDENBERG LINE
GAP OF TEN MILES IS CUT IN
VAUNTED LINE THAT BEARS
NAME OLD HINDENBURG
GREAT RETREAT INEVITABLE
Roads To Douai, Cambrai An^i St.
Quentin Already Thoroughly In¬
vested By British And French
New York.—Over a front of thirty
miles from the region of Arras to Pe
ronne, Field Marshal Haig’s forces
have literally smashed the German
line.
The southern portion of the famous
Drocourt-Queant switch line, which
had been heralded as the impregnable
bulwark of the German defense in the
north, has given way under the vio¬
lence of the British onslaught over its
entire front from the Scarpe river to
Queant, a distance of virtually ten
miles, and Monday night saw the Ca¬
nadian and English troops who carried
out the maneuver hard after the de¬
feated enemy some three miles to the
eastward.
Thousands of prisoners have been
taken from the strongly resisting en
cmv, who at last account* was fighting
violently as he gave ground toward
the Canal du Nord.
By the victory seemingly is ended
the menace of the Hindenburg line to
the south, which the British are grad¬
ually approaching over its entire front.
Already thoroughly outflanked on the
north ; nd with the French well upon
its southern base, military necessity
apparently will not require that the
Germans relinquish the Hindenburg
fortifications and realign their front
from Flanders to Rheims in order to
avert disaster at the hands of, their
now swiftly moving antagonists.
Already the roads to Douai, Cam¬
brai and St. Quentin are thoroughly
Invested by the British and French ar¬
mies, while north of Soissons the
French and Americans ,are in posi¬
tions of vantage from which to carry
out turning movements which will out¬
flank La on and the ("hemin-dt-s-Danies
and Aisne lines. The situation of the
enemy, viewed from the war maps, is
the most perilous he has yet been in.
GREATEST TAX LEVY IN
HISTORY OF NATION
Measure Drawn To Raise More Than
$8,000,000,000 For War Expenses
Reported To The House *
Washington.—The new revenue the bill, his- j I
greatest of all tax measures in
tory of the nation . . . with a levy |
affecting every individual and approved business j j
concern in the country, was
unanimously by the house ways and
means committee. Chairman Kitchin j
will introduce the measure in the of j
house and ask that consideration j
it begin at once. Leaders hope to send .
j] to the senate within ten days after
'
debate begins.
The final committee estimate of the
revenue to be yielded under the new
bill is $8,015,792,000 as against $3,941,-
633,000 last year under the present
law. The largest source of estimated
revenue is from excess profits, includ¬
ing war profits $3,100,000,000, and the
sss r ss£r=r«&si
000 from corporations.
____ __
“Skip-Stop . ,, System _ . Is — To S
^‘adopted Washington — “Skipt-stop” system
by street railways over
the country at the request of the fuel
administration is expected to save 1,
of coal annually, the-ad
ministration announced in a statement
embodying suggestions to electric rail¬
way companies, state administrators
and state and municipal officials.
“Ship-stops," the statement said, not
only save coal urgently needed for
war work.
Death Threatened For 5,000 Persons
Amsterdam—An announcement by
the Bolsheviki government to the ef
feet that 5,000. social revolutionists
who have been arrested and sentenced
to death, will be executed if the rev
lutionary ^lartv conducts freshr in¬
trigues against the soivet government,
is quoted in a Moscow dispatch to The
Vossische Zeitung.
Minimum Of $2.20 For Wheat In 1919
Washington. — By proclamation
President Wilson set $2.20 a bushel
as the minimum price guaranteed by
the government for the 1919 wheat
crop. A disinterested commission,
the president stated, will be appointed
to see whether the increased cost of
farm labor and supplies would justify
an increase above that price. Possibil
itv of peace before the middle of 1920
was indicated in a memorandum
written by the president and accom
as a factor.
- _
Recess Is Now Planned By The House
Washington.—Plans for a recess of
the house from about September 20
until after the November elections so
that members of all parties may take
part in the congressional campaign
are being considered by house leaders.
To carry out the program speedy ac¬
tion wiir be necessary on the revenue j
bill, the water power bill, on which a
final vote will be sought and an army
appropriation bill to carry approxi
mate jy OOP,000,900 made necessary
by the extension of the draft ages.
Health Was Shattered
South Boston Woman Tells
How She Suffered Before
Doan’s Cured Her.
"I was in awful shape from kidney
disease,” says Mrs. W. F. Sterritt, 767
Dorchester Ave., South Boston, Mass.
“My health was shattered and I would
often fall in a heap. Had someone
stabbed me in the back with a knife,
the pains could not have been worse.
“I lost thirty pounds,
was terribly nervous
and could not do my
housework. Fainting
spells came on and my
feet and limbs swelled
so badly I couldn’t wear
my shoes. Puffy sacs
came under my eyes,
my skin looked shiny
Hrs. Sterritt and the impression of a
finger left a dent that
remained for some time.
"My kidneys were in awful shape
and it seemed that I had to pass the
secretions every hour. The passages
were scant and terribly distressing.
I was feverish at night and perspired
profusely. discouraged until told about
“I was
Doan’s Kidney Pills. They brought
improvement from the first and
about a dozen boxes cured me. My
cure has lasted.”
Cat Doan’s at An? Store, 60c a Bos
DOAN'S “pfJLV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
roT
MALARIA
Chills end Fewer, Biliousness,
Constipation and ailments
requiring a TONIC treatment'.
IMME
GUARANTEED
end made bq
Behrens Drag Co
Waco, Tax. 50<
s d by
AU - Dru^isU 1
One Treatment
with Cuticura
Clears Dandruff
All dramrists ^ Soap 25^Ointment^ & 50/ralccnn 26,
Said for SO Yurt. FOR MAUJtIA, COLLS JUTO FEVER.
Aiio* Flu tarn! Stnajtitilst Taste. At All bra, Store*.
HAIR . PARKER’S
BALSAM
✓ A toilet preparation of merit.
JM l pate eradicate d^dru ft.
Beaut? to Ore? or Faded Hair.
/y . 4 Wc. and >l.oe at Prugrglgta. .
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 36-1918.
IN MEMORY OF KITCHENER
Great Soldier’s Admirers Have Raised
Large Fund as a Foundation for
Scholarships for Young Men.
Lord Kitchener’s admirers in Great
Britain have subscribed a fund of sev¬
eral thousand pounds which is to be
used as a foundation for scholarships
to be awarded young men anxious to
obtain good education as training for
business careers. Recipients of the
Kitchener scholarships must be in need
of them and are not permitted to hold
any other scholarship at tlie same time.
They are required to have passed tlie
equivalent of college entrance require¬
ments and are to obtain practical of¬
fice or ship experience with their col¬
lege work.
The Lord Kitchener national me¬
morial fund, says an exchange, an¬
nounces that successful applicants for
the scholarships must show evidence
of exceptional ability and submit well
thought-out plans of training suited to
the careers they intend to pursue.
Medical tests of fitness must be passed
and recommendations from the prin¬
cipals of the schools they have at¬
tended must lie furnished.
The scholarships will be granted
only to sons of dead or disabled officers
of the British army for the present.
They carry a maximum grant of $750
for each student, except in the case of
traveling scholarships. The traveling
scholarships will not be established un¬
til Kitchener scholars begin to be grad¬
uated. They will -afford opportunity
for post-graduate study and observa¬
tion of business methods abroad.
Hard times breed one class of sin¬
ners and prosperity breeds another.
When pluck gets busy luck takes a
back seat.
Post
Toasties
(Made of Corn)
Taste -fcwjce as
£ood now cause
1 know ihey
Save Help
ihe
\U Wheat
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