Newspaper Page Text
NOW RAISES
600 CHICKENS
After Being Relieved of Or*
ganic Trouble by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Oregon, III.—“ I took Lydia E. Pink¬
ham’s Vegetable Compound trouble for an which or¬
pulled ganic down
me un¬
til I could not put my
foot to the floor and
could scarcely do my
work, and as I live
on a small farm and
raise six hundred
chickens every year
it made it very hard
forme. *
“I saw the Com¬
pound advertised tried in
our paper, and
it It has restored
my health so I can do all *ny work and
I am so grateful that I am recommend¬
ing it to my friends.”—Mrs. D. M.
Alters, R. R. 4, Oregon, 111.
Only women who have suffered the tor¬
tures of such troubles and have dragged the
along from day to day can realize
relief which this famous root and herb
remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Alters. Vegetable
Compound, “•Women everywhere brought to Mrs. in Mrs. Alters*
condition should profit by her recom¬
mendation, and if there are any com¬
plications write Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice.
The result of their 40 years experience
Is at your service.
The man who Is really good often
Inis a sad look that is discouraging.
hummer Diarrhoea* with GBQVH'S
can be controlled more quickly
BABV BOWEL MBDfOINHI ami It is absolutely
harm loss. Just as effective tor Adults as tut
Children.
Many a man who marries an heir¬
ess lives to regret monkeying with a
get-rleh-qulck game.
All country stores should stock Vacfter
Balm because It gives satisfaction, and
pleased customers nre your best adver¬
tisers. It also saves your capital by
taking the place of many other reme¬
dies. Samples free. K. W. VaeRer, Inc.,
New Orleans, La.—Adv.
"Cannon Fodder."
“At Belleau, with three of my men,
we. ran Into a bunch of twenty Ger
cbanged their minds and began to
mans. They shouted ‘Kumernd!’ but
shoot. We rushed them with bayo¬
nets. We brought back two prison¬
ers,”
“1 know about the prisoners, but
did you kill a German yourself?”
“Yes; 1 killed three, one with ray
bayonet, which broke; one with the
butt of ray rifle arid one with this
trench kuif'i*.'*
‘‘Did they kllj any of your men !n
the close In-flght?”
“N'o, they can’t tight unless they’re
all together and have machine guns
and grenades.”—A Serbian Sergeant
to Don Martin,
New Canadian Metal.
A metal suitable for the very fluesjl
forms of cutlery hii# been developed
from combining iron, cromlum, and eo
halt, according to an announcement
made by ITof. VV. L. Goodwin ol
Queen’s university, Kingston, Ont.
Professor Goodwin Is chairman ol
the Canadian section of the Society ol
Chemical industry, which organism
tion, In conjunction with Canadiar
chemists and chemical engineers. Is
working toward getting a higher de
glee of extraction of useful substances
from ores and finding new uses foi
waste products. Canadian chemists
were responsible for the discovery ol
the new metal, which is peculiarly e
Canadian product.
The Inexperienced maid wants to he
a man's first love, but the wise widow
prefers to bn his last.
I'll Take
POSTUM!
—you hear*it more
ana more when one
is asked what he'll
have for his morn¬
ing drink.
Delightful and taste.and aroma free¬
dom from the dis¬
comforts that Ao
wi-fch coffee.
Nourishing ful, economical. health¬
No important Waste at aii
an item
these days. Give
INSTANT POSTUM
atrial.
FAVORABLE FOR
ST. MART’S
GOVERNOR DORSEY FINDS
PROJECT IS FAVORED AT
WASHINGTON
STATE NEWSJF
Brief News item* Of Importance
ered From All Parte
Of The State
Atlanta.—Governor Dorsey and
Georgia delegation who have
some time in Washington, trying
interest the officials in the St.
canal project, have returned
expressing themselves as well
fied with the results of their trip.
At a dinner given in honor of the
Georgians previous to their departure
by the Southern Commercial
gress, Governor Dorsey said he had
yet to hear one person speak a word
against the project which would pro¬
vide a short cut. by water from the
Atlantic to the gulf, connecting the
proposed chain of inland
from Boston to New Orleans.
Senator Smith of Georgia, said he
had no doubt congress would
the money to build the canal within
the next two or three years, if not
immediately. It was laost important,
he said, for the development of Amer¬
ican commerce after the war.
Mayor Preston, of Baltimore, prom¬
ised the Georgians that the subject
would have prominent attention at
the forthcoming convention of the
Southern Commercial Congress in
Baltimore, beginning December 8,
theme oT which will be "World Com¬
merce after the War.”
During his speech Governor Dorsey
proposed that a conference of south¬
ern commercial leaders be held prior
to the Baltimore convention, with a
view of taking an inventory of the
south’s industries for presentation al
the later meeting. Dr. Clarence J.
Owens managing director of the con¬
gress, announced that the executive
officers approved the holding of such
a conference to be held In Atlanta on
October 14.
Change* Are Made In “Ginles*” Day*
Atlanta.—A bulletin Issued by L. G.
Hurdman. fuel administrator for Geor¬
gia, modifies the original order of gin¬
less days as it affected counties in
the north Georgia section, and an¬
nounces that these counties will have
no more glutens days to observe after
September 11 until Monday, Novem¬
ber 1, The counties included in this
order, whflBh are those fionh of and
including Carroll, Campbell, Pulton,
DeKalb, Rockdale, Walton, Oconee,
Taliaferro, Wilkes and Lincoln, are
required to observe ginless Mondays
and Tuesdays during the months of
August, November and December. An¬
other change has been made in trans¬
ferring the counties of Clayton, New¬
ton, Morgan and McDuffie from the
north to the middle Georgia section,
with reference to the observance of
ginless days.
Commission Disapproves Phone Raise
Atlanta.—The railroad commission
refused to approve the petition of the
Southern Bell Telephone company,
which asked for increased installation
charges of $5 for a telephone costing
the subscriber $2 or less per month,
$10 for a telephone costing from $2 to
$4 per month, $15 for a telephone cost¬
ing over $4 per month. The installa¬
tion charges have already gone into
effect in Atlanta. The telephone com¬
pany, in asking for the approval of the
charges, was acting under orders from
Postmaster General Burleson, who has
supervision of all telephone and tel
J egraph lines. But the commission
did approve a moving charge that
would be the exact cost of the mate¬
rial and labor of moving a telephone.
First Limited Service Men Report
Camp Gordon,)—One hundred and
ninety limited service men, the first
ever received at Camp Gordon, report¬
ed at the camp station from ail parts
of Georgia in answer to a call for
] them issued by the state draft author¬
ities. The new men will go to the
fourth replacement regiment to be uni¬
formed and equipped and will then be
sent to the state officer in charge of
selective service operations to be used
, as clerks at various draft boards
j about the state. These limited through- service
j men will remain in uniform
out their service in the army and will
; be subject to special regulations issued
by military authorities.
July Inheritance Taxes Collected
Atlanta.—Inheritance taxes amount
! ing to $2,197.88 were collected in July
| j in Fulton county, the comptroller according general. to the
report sent t»
| The largest amount was paid by O. and
M. C. Horton, trustees for the estate
of Mrs. Frances Tucker.
Concerted Community Action in Ware
Waycross.—A special meeting of the
Ware county community league was
! held here recently with the view of
I federating as many as practicable of
; the various woman's organizations in
j I the city and county. They feel that
there is at this time more than ever
| before the need for concerted action
j in helping in community building, civic the
improvements, exciting interest in
canning clubs, and the better they are
organized for this work, the more ef
fectually and the greater will be the
dispatch in handling war work
THE CT,RV1?F,ANT> COfTRIFlR rr,F!VFT,A VT>. fJEORGIA
i Bunding Barred Until After The War
Atlanta.—No further construction of
non-essential buildings will be al¬
lowed in this section until after the
war. It was announced by Thomas
K. Glenn, regional chairman of region
No. 12, of the resources and conver¬
sion section of the war industries
board, that no contractor will be al¬
lowed to secure building material with¬
out first having been granted a per¬
mit by the building material section
of the board. This is in line with the
government’3 request to all manufac¬
turers of building materials, that they
pledge themselves to furnish materials
only for war work. The only excep¬
tion under the ruling is in the case of
renovation of old buildings, where the
cost of material does not exceed $2,-
500. In these cases no permit Is re¬
quired. The force at the headquarters
of the Atlanta division of region No.
12 of the resources and conversion sec¬
tion of the war industries board has
been kept busy answering letters, tele¬
phone calls and callers, giving infor¬
mation concerning the sweeping order
that was issued by the government
in regard to the suspension of all un¬
necessary building for the duration of
the war. Robert R. Otis, chairman of
the Atlanta sub-region, stated that the
order simply means the government
has acted fairly In the matter by first
advising all manufacturers to convert
their plans for producing war necessi¬
ties and that materials for non-essen
tiai purposes would not be distrib¬
uted.
23 Killed, 38 Wounded, Of The 326th
Atlanta.—Tested in actual battle, of¬
ficers and men of the 326th regiment,
of the 82d division, have shown their
vafue as fighting men, according to a
letter which has just been received in
Atlanta, telling of a road on August
4 in which companies M and K took
part and in which there were heavy
casualties on both sides. While the
American losses were heavier than the
Germans the majority of their casual¬
ties were the result of a direct hit by
a shell after the attack was over and
the two companies were returning to
their own lines and were apparently
out of danger. In the raid the Ameri¬
cans lost six men killed, while some
forty Germans were left dead in their
own trenches not a single prisoner
being taken, owing to the fierceness
of the struggle. Returning to their
own lines a shell burst in the midst of
company K, killing seventeen men and
wounding thirty-eight, bringing the to¬
tal casualties for the engagement up
to 23 Americans killed and 38 wounded.
Cobb Will Hoar Rate Reduction
Atlanta.—Judge Andrew J. Cobb of
the Athens superior court circuit, has
assumed jurisdiction to hear the pray¬
er for injunction against the increase
of electric current, light and gas rates
by the Georgia Railway and Light
company .and the,Atlanta Gas Light
company; authorized by the Georgia
railroad commission. Judge Cobb
signed the order in chambers on peti¬
tion of the company that Judge George
L. Beil, before whom the suit was
brought by the city of Atlanta’s citi¬
zens, committee and individuals, nor
any other judge in the Atlanta circuit,
was qualified to sit in the case, be¬
cause all of them, as consumers of the
electric light and gas, were in the
same class as the city of Atlanta and
individual consumers, as interested
parties to the suit.
Two Atlantans Sunk On Transport
Atlanta.—Tvvo prominent Atlanta
men, both connected with the Y. M.
C. A., were on board the British trans¬
port that was loaded with about two
thousand American soldiers, which
was sunk off the coast of England by
a German submarine, according to in¬
formation received here. Rev. Chas.
A. Bass, deputy grand master of he
Georgia Masonic lodge, and Werner
H. Jeffries, well known Atlantan, .he
son of Thomas H. Jeffries, the ordinary
of Fulton county, were on hoard the
ship.
Farm Sell* For Twenty-five Thousand
Americus.—W. M. and R. T, Humbei
of Americus sold their fine farm ol
250 acres near this city to John T.
Cobb, a prominent farmer of Oconee
county, who will com® here within s
brief time to reside upon the planta¬
tion. The consideration paid by Mr.
Cobh is said to have been twenty-five
thousand dollars.
30.000 Children In School In Atlants
Atlanta.—The public schools of At
lanta opened on schedule time and
about thirty thousand children were
assigned seats in the various grades.
There have been no figures given out
yet as to the exact number of pupils
enrolled, but the school office declares
that the number will exceed that of
last year.
Prominent Planter Kills Himself
Lverly.—John W. Kellet. prominent
planter, who resided near Lyerly, shot
himself at his home and died before
help could reach him. Despondency
over his own ill health, the death of
his wife and the entry of two of his
nine children in the army service are
said to have led to the suicide.
Forty-Two Georgia Boys Commissioned
Atlanta.—Six Atlantans and thirty
six Georgians are named in a list of
considerably more than one thousand
men who have recently completed the
training course in the field of artillery
central officers’ training school at
Camp Taylor, Louisville, Ky. These
| have been awarded their commissions
! as second lieutenants of field artillery
! following their successful completion
' of the course. The list of graduates
1 is issued by the committee on pub¬
[ lic information
1HE WEEK’S
IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA¬
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOOTJHE WORLD
A Condensed Record Of Happenings
Of Interest From All Points
Of The World
Domestic
Six persons were killed and 45 were
injured in an outlying section of Chi¬
cago, 111., when a freight train hacked
into a crowded street car. The acci¬
dent was due to negligence on the
of the towerman.
The impression prevalent in many
quarters that members of congress
are subject to draft was removed by
a ruling of General Crowder. Upon
resignation, however, members of con¬
gress would automatically become sub¬
ject to draft.
Medill McCormick, Republican, will
contest the Illinois senatorship this
fail with James Hamilton Lewis, Dem¬
ocratic incumbent. He was nominated
by a plurality of 62,000 over Mayor
Thompson of Chicago and Congress¬
man George Edmond Foss.
Eugene V, Debs, charged with vio¬
lating the espionage act, was found
guilty by a federal jury at Cleveland,
Ohio. Debs said: “I repudiate noth¬
ing; I retract nothing; I deny noth¬
ing. Everything will come out all
right in God’s good time.”
Joseph C. S. Blackburn, former sen¬
ator from Kentucky, and in recent
years resident commissioner of the
Lincoln Memorial commission, died at
hfs residence in Washington from at¬
tacks of the heart. He was about 80
years old and served in the Confed¬
erate army.
The Louisiana orange crop this fall
will be only slightly over 55,000 boxes,
or about 35 per cent of the annual
average yield in this state for the six
years prior to 1915.
Habitual use of morphine, cocaine,
heroin and preparations containing
other narcotic drugs has increased
rapidly in the United States within the
last two years, and a drastic anti-nar¬
cotic law must be enacted to check
the wholesale spread of the habit.
In South Carolina’s second Demo¬
cratic primary, William P. Pollock of
Cheraw defeated Thomas H. Peeples
of Barnw'ell for the nomination for
the short senate term.
Washington
According to reiwrts from London
the British steamer Galway Cashtie,
a steamer of 7,988 tons gross, has been
torpedoed and sunk. She had 960 per¬
sons on board, of whom more than 700
were reported saved.
In wiping out the St. Mihiel salient
in seventy-two hours, American troops,
supported by French divisions, captur¬
ed 15,000 prisoners and more than 200
guns of all calibers and hundreds of
machine guns and trench mortars.
The United States government has
asked Sweden and Norway to ascer¬
tain the fate of Consul Poole, w-ho was
reported to have been placed under
arrest by the Bolsheviki government.
That a Spanish steamer was fired
upon by a German submarine near the
Canary Islands is confirmed.
The part played by the German Im¬
perial bank in financing the Russian
Bolshevik movement is disclosed in
a series of secret documents which the
American government is making pub¬
lic.
Copies of "tile secret documents of
the Imperial German government, giv¬
en oht by the American government,
carry the file numbers of the reichs
bank or of the German general staff.
One of the reichsbank memoranda
announces to the comnussair of for¬
eign affairs (Lenine), that 50,000,000
rubles of gold had been placed to the
credit of the Bolsheviki at Stockholm.
One of the reichsbank memoranda
tells of a credit of 5,000,000 rubles for
• ! the assistant naval commissair in the
Far East, entrusted with carrying off
or destroying the American stores of
material at Vladivostok.
The view expressed in official cir¬
cles concerning the proposed “non
binding”' peace discussion of
is that Austria is cracking, and now is
the time to hit the hardest.
j Germany’s latest peace feeler, ad¬
vanced through Austria, it was official¬
ly stated, best finds its answer in
President Wilson’s Baltimore speech,
delivered last April.
Tht,re is to be no round table con¬
; ferences, no sounding out processes,
such as Germany proposes, and such
as she hopes will give opportunity
probably to deal with her enemies
separately.
President Wilson announces that a
; fair price for raw cotton will be fixed
j if that should be deemed necessary af¬
j ter the committee to be appointed by
the war industries board has complet¬
: ed its inquiry into the general cotton
! situation.
Most of the cotton raised in the
United States this year will be used
for - war — purposes. -----
I General Pershing has issued the fol
| lowing order: "It is the duty of every
j officer and soldier to kill on the spot 1
any person who in a fight urges any
one to surrender or stop fighting. It
i makes no difference whether the per
son is a stranger or a friend, an offi
cer or a private. Whoever he is he
should be shot on the spot. In battle
there is no time to inquire into the
identity or motives of persons who
create panic or disorganization, or
who advise surrender.”
Wnile Austria’s proposal, reported
from Amsterdam, has not reached
Washington in official form, it is ex¬
pected through some neutral country
—possibly Sweden.
Allied leaders recognize Austria’s
peace offer as an effort of Germany to
obtain the best peace therms possible.
If any reply is made to Austria’s
proposed peace offer it will be after a
conference between the United States
and the other co-belligerents.
It is declared that the American
army next year will be bigger than the
British and French armies combined.
Regional directors of the railroad
administration were instructed to claim
deferred classification for railroad gen¬
eral officers, shopmen, trainmen, skill¬
ed yard men, road and maintenance of
way foremen and skilled workers, tel¬
ephone and telegraph operators and
other essential employees.
Metz, which is historically rich in
its past, where Charles proclaimed
the golden bull in 1356; which in 1552
was given to Henry II of France, to¬
gether with Toul and Verdun, and in
1870 became the pivotal point around
which the French armies under Mar¬
shal Bazaine operated, around which
centers interest in the present Ameri¬
can drive, is the most strongly fortified
city in Germany. The fortifications
extend along the Moselle and Seille
and were begun by the French in 1870
and finished later by the Germans.
Information has reached Washington
from a source usually reliable that
Turkey has sent a large force to the
Bulgarian border whdre trouble is
brewing over division of territorial
spoils of war between these two al¬
lies of Germany.
European
Metz, the center of the present
American drive, is the capital of Lor¬
raine, and is about eleven miles east
of the French frontier.
The American first army has car¬
ried out the initial task assigned to
it—the leveling of the famous St. Mi¬
hiel salient in Lorraine.
More than 13,500 prisoners have
been taken from the Germans by the
Americans, together with many gun*
and great quantities of ammunition
and other war stores.
From Hattonville, on the north,
across the salient eastward to Pagny,
the Americans debouched from off
the big sack that extended southward
to St. Mihiel, trapping within it by
their fast advance all the enemy forces
who failed to take refuge in flight when
the great bombardment heralded the
approach of the offensive.
Beginning in the northwest and
crossing the salient eastward, Fresnes
les-Eparges, Hattonville, Preny and
Pagny and all the ground lying be¬
tween them are in American hands.
First returns to Provost Marshal
General Crowder from the second
great mobilization of the nation’s man
power for the war on Germany indi¬
cates that at least fourteen million
men have been added to the army res¬
ervoir. The estimated number of men
between 18 and 21 and 32 and 46 years
of age, was thirteen million.
A supreme line of defense, to be call¬
ed the Parsifal line, is being construct¬
ed by the Germans from Antwerp to
Metz.
An article in the Echo de Paris says
the Germans are putting the Antwerp
forts in a defensive condition.
Nothing but heart failure on the
part of the British nation can prevent
our achieving a real victory,” said Pre¬
mier Lloyd-George, speaking at Man¬
chester, recently.
"To end all wars we must impose
a durable peace from our enemies.
The Prussian military power must not
onlj be beaten, but Germany herself
must know, and the Uerman people 1
must know, the rulers have outraged
the law of humanity and that Prussian j
strentgh cannot protect them from j
punishment,” says Llovd-George.
“A league of nations with the Prus
sian military power triumphant would
be a ieague of fox and gees—one fox
and many geese. The geese would ■
greatly diminish in numbers,” says an j I
English statesman.
The emperor of Germany says it |
takes two to make peace—one cannot |
do it unless he can overcome the other I
Emperor William says Germany has :
made- it plain on more than one oc- !
casion that she Is willing to make j
peace, which, he says, is plain enough
%end. for any ‘'sensible people” to compre-1
Twenty-five British prisoners are j
confined like birds in a cage near the ;
flying sheds at Evers, a suburb of I
Brussels.
A troop ship with 2,800 American
soldiers on board has been torpedoed.
All hands were saved. The troop ship
was beached. The transfer of the
American soldiers from the stricken
vessbi to escorting British and Amer¬
ican torpedo boat destroyers was made
quickly without injury to any one. All
escaped injury when the torpedo ex¬
ploded and they were soon on their
way to a British port. There was no
sign of panic on board. The admira¬
ble behavior of the men was gratify¬
ing to the officers. Many of the
troops were from Chicago and Cleve¬
land.
Emperor William declares that ev
| ery one in the remotest corner of the
fatherland knows that he has "left
unturned shorten the i
no stone to war j
i as far as possible for the people and |
for the entire civilized European 1
world. . i
j The soldier statement was is recently made that found a mor- Ger-j
man j
j tally lines wounded at Fismette. far inside He the had Ameri- lived j j
| can
for a long time in America and spoke
English well and possibly he Intended
to get an American uniform and cre¬
ate doubt or disorganization among
the Americans.
; g LUUlt ft #11# *11 IT A|||] IftllLlJ IDA
U
TONGUE IF SICK,
CROSS, FEVERISH
! HURRY, MOTHER! REMOVE POI¬
SONS FROM LITTLE STOMACH,
LIVER, BOWELS.
GIVE CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS
AT ONCE IF BILIOUS OR
CONSTIPATED.
Look at the tongue, mother! If
coated, it is a sure sign that your lit¬
tle one’s stomach, liver and bowels
needs a gentle, thorough cleansing at
once.
When peevish, cross, listless, pale,
doesn’t sleep, doesn’t eat or act natu¬
rally, or is feverish, stomach sour,
breath bad; has stomach-ache, sorer
throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a
teaspoonful of “California Syrup of
Figs,” and in a few hours all the foul,
constipated waste, undigested food
and sour bile gently moves out of the
little bowels without griping, and you
have a well, playful child again.
You needn't coax sick children to
take this harmless "fruit laxative;”
they love its delicious taste, and it
always makes them feel splendid.
Ask your druggist for a botcie of
“California Syrup of Figs,” which ha*
directions for babies, children of all
ages and for grown-ups plainly on the
bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold
here. To be sure you get the genuine,
ask to see that it is made by the “Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup Company.” Refuse
any other kind with contempt.—Adv*
Quite a Difference.
Bill Bashern was not a safe person
to deal with. On the contrary, lie
dealt with safes; but the lady visitor
to the slums was not to know this.
“So,” she said to Bill’s little son,
“they’ve put your father away for safe
keeping?”
“Kali! Fer safe-breakln'!” replied
the grubby one, with a wink.
GIRLS! USE LEMONS
FOR SUNBURN, TAN
Try It! Make thi* lemon lotion
to whiten your tanned or
freckled akin.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons in¬
to a bottle containing three ounces of
Orchard White, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle,
sunburn and tan lotion, and complex¬
ion whltener, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter will supply
three ounces of Orchard White for a
few cents. Massage this sweetly fra¬
grant lotion into the face, neck, arms
and hands and see how quickly the
freckles, sunburn, windburn and tan
disappear and how clear, soft and
white the skin becomes. Yes! It la
harmless._Adv. ‘
_
An impossibility.
Mi's. Just wed—If your husband’s
judgment should diffet; from, yours,
what would you do?
Mrs. Longwed—I never had a chance
to find out. He never dares to differ.
—
Soft, Clear Skins.
Night and morning bathe the face
with Cuticura Soap and hot water. If
there are pimples first smear them
with Cuticura Ointment. For free sam
pies address. ‘‘Cuticura, Dept. by' X, Boa
ton,” Sold by druggists and matL
Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50.—Adv.
So It Goes.
‘That trademark made a fortune
for me.” “Y r et now 'you shelve it in
favor of a crest.”
The Strong Withsttnd the Heat of Summer
Better Than the Weak
UW peopte . who feeble
who are and younger people
are weak, will be STS^fe strengthened and enabled to
EaWV| e T2?T , TONIC m n &I&
and enriches the blood >od and and bnilds builds op op the the whole whole sys" sys¬
tem, Ton or- can rtiuD ------* feel ‘ Its * Strengthening, - Inrigor- -
atlng affect.
Over Development
“Don't you think that fishing is good
exercise?”
"Yes—for the imagination.”
FOR HEADACHE
l SE VACHER-BALM. it is cooling,
and relieves promptly, besides being
harmless.
Avoid imitations.—Adv.
Chile has nine paper factories em
ploying: an aggregate of 400 workers.
_____
•
„ onst pattern generally ,. indicates . disorders*
s
stomach liver and bowels Wright'e Indian
U restore regularity without
Adv.
----——
Sunbeams of humor quickly melt the
ice of sarcasm.
When Vour Eyes Need Care
Try Murine Eye Remedy
No Smarting— Just Eye Comfort. 00 cents at
Druggists or m&iL Write for Free Bye Book.
UCBJ.VS £YE REMEDY CO- CHICAGO