Newspaper Page Text
TOO WEAK TO
00 ANYTHING
4 Serious Feminine Illness Remedied
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
of Casco, Wis.—"After the birth of each
my children I had and
M
of the trouble some time ago and took
some more of your Compound and was
soon all right again. I always recom¬
mend lish your testimonial medicine and the you benefit may pub¬ of
my for
other women.' Casco, — Mrs. Wis. J ULE3 Bero, Jr.,
R. 1, Box 99,
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound, made from native roots and herbs,
contains no narcotic or harmful drugs,
and today holds the record of being the
most successful remedy for female ills
in this country, and thousands of vol¬
untary testimonials prove this fact.
If you have the slightest doubt that
Lydia E Pinkham’a write vegetable Lydia Com¬ E.
pound will Medicine help you, (confidential) to
Pinkham Co.
Lynn Mass , for advice Your letter
will be opened, read and answered confidence. by a
woman, and held in strict
Sculpture by Wholesale.
Many of the marble statuettes sold
In nrt stores are cast—not carved. The
mold used consists of two parts—an
outer casting of plaster of purls and
an inner mold of rubber. The solution
poured Into the mold Is composed
chiefly of marble dust—mere waste.
After the mold has been removed the
statue Is scraped and polished, and the
result Is n finished work of art.
Approved Subject to Conditions.
Mrs. Pester There’s a movement on
foot to compel husbands to pay sal¬
aries to their wives the same as to
anyone else who works for them. Don’t
you think that’s fair?
Her Husband—Eminently fair, If the
husband reserves the right to fire those
who prove unsatisfactory."
Case Seemed Hopeless
Dm of Doan’s, However, Brought Complete
Recovery end the Results Hava
Been Lasting.
“I used to think my back would
surely break,” saya Mrs. H. 8. Fix,
prominent ter,'Street, lodge Beading, T ‘ending, woman, 340 “My Carpen- back
— fhtn% Pa.
' J
aby and wj
time. The
ney secre t i o n
burned and
ed as often
every ten
utes.
nxy eyes were al¬
most closed
the swollen
beneath
and my
too, s w e 11
twice their
mal size. For
most, a year
was practically and
er expected fiecn to get downstairs again. I
had told that nothing could be
done for me, and had given up all
hope of ever getting better. My condi¬
tion was critical when 1 was told
about Doan's Kidney I’ilis. I began
using them and the resuliR made me
hopeful of getting well again. The pain
in my hack eased up and my swollen
limbs started to look move natural. I
kept tirely on using Doan’s and became en
well. I owe tny life to Doan’s.”
Sworn to before me,
HARRY WOLF, Notary Public.
Get Doan's at Any Store. 80c * Bos
DOAN’S vmv
FOSTER MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
Prayed for Cure
Finds it After 10 Years
Food Would Sour and Boil
—Teeth Like Chalk
Mr. Herbert M. Gessner write* from his
home in Berlin, N. II.:
I had stomach trouble over ten years;
kept getting worse. 1 tried everything for
relief but it came back worse than ever.
Last { a jl [ got awfully bad; could only eat
light loaf bread and tea. In January I got
so bad that what I would eat would sour
and boil: my teeth would be like chalk.
1 suffered terribly. I prayed every day for
something to cure me. One day I read
about EATONIC and told my w ife to get
me a box at the drug store as I was going
to work at 4 p. ni. 1 took one-third of it
and began to feel relief; when it was
three-fourths gone, I felt fine and when it
was used up 1 had no pains. Wife got me
another box but I have felt the pain but
twice. I used five tablets out of the new
box and I have no more stomach trouble.
Now I write to tell vou bow thankful I
am that I heard of EATONIC. I feel like
a new man; I eat what I like, drink plenty
of water, and it never hurts me at all.
ECZEMA!
•Honey bac k without question
if HUNT’S SALVE fails in the
treatment SINGWORM.TETTKR of ITCH, ECZEMA. i
orother Price* /I
75c itching akin diseases.
Ll at druggistor direct from
Rlcharis IMctas
YEL
iSjr Site Film
c A fordevelopment and 6 Velvet
Print*, or send 6 negRtiwR,
Jf anv ♦0c for site, Beautiful and3lV for Mourned ti print*, Hn- or
arjremwxt, Our nearness insures
•rorapt serv'oe. Full IVtaila
and Pric* I.iat on request.
*3KE PHOTO FWSHIH6 CO.. 298 *•!! 4rg , Boawctt, ft
was so weak I
couldn’t do anything
I found a book
about Lydia E. Pirik
h Compound a m’s Vegetable
so
thought I would try
it, and after taking
it I soon felt bet
ter. That was fif
teen years ago and
I have felt well ever
since except that I
i
Mrs Fix
EDITORS TO MEET
AT
PRESS ASSOCIATION PLANS
GREATEST MEET IN HIS¬
TORY OF BODY
STATE LEWS IF
Brief News Items Gathered Here
There From All Sections
Of The State
Atlanta.—Georgia newspaper
1 in every corner of the state are
: arranging their engagements so as
lie away from their offices for
J U,y 3 a " d ar ;:‘^ ki " g d !!
for the receipt . t of their , .
um' from feooretary Ha Stanton
take them to Carrollton, Carroll
ty, for the annual convention of
; fourth estate of the Empire state.
few will announce presently that,
I cording to our usual custom, there
he no July 18 issue of the paper, the
editor and his wife and son and
| (laughters being on their annual
I | Ing pushers. with the other Georgia
The white phper shortage will
l relieved and forgotten for that week
• for these Others w.U .... have , tnwty .
aides freshening up the ocal pages in
quips 1 ,!i r . ab at . 8 ?,? the expense and ” , -- crack of f ln tbe g ~ .. absent
“boss.” The attendance is to he the
largest ever; the number of new mem¬
bers is expected to be greater than
in any one year of the history of the
association, and the meeting itself Is
going to lay in the shade all former
meetings, even that memorable Mon¬
roe convention of last year,
President Kelley Simmons of Mc
Itae this year has slipped down to
Florida to' attend the state meet of
editors and gather fresh Florida ideas
for the Carrollton meeting. In addi¬
tion, he has attended many district
meetings during the last year.
President Simmons has also started
a campaign for boosting Georgia.
Credit that to his official account.
The officers of the association are:
First vice president, W. C. Sutllve,
of the Savannah Press.
Second vice president, C. D. Roun¬
tree, of the Wrightsville Headlight.
Third vice president, Ernest Camp,
of the Monroe Tribune.
Secretary, C. E. Benns, of the But¬
ler Herald.
Corresponding secretary, Hal M.
Stanley, of the Dublin Courier-Her¬
ald.
Treasurer, L. J. Howell, of the
Cuthbert Leader.
B The approaching meeting of .the
Georgia Press' tCssocition will hi the
thirty-fourth.
Blind Man’s Wife Slain By Bullet
Macon.—C. G. Creason, a blind man,
who has been playing a hand organ
on the streets of Macon for the past
five years, shot and killed his wife in
their apartment over a meat market on
Broadway. Creason claims he had no
intention of killing his wife, and was
shooting at. two men who, he claims,
had been visiting his apartment in the
alley alongside the building when he
opened fire. His wife, however, was
standing at the window, he claims,
and the first bullet struck her in the
chest and she fell headlong into the
alley, dying a few moments later.
Creason kept pulling the trigger of
his pistol and fired five shots. He.
did not know for some time afterward
that he had killed his wife. When a
deputy sheriff ran up to Creason’s
apurtnient after the shooting he
found the blind man and his little
j four-year-old son there. Creason turn¬
ed over his pistol to the officer, who
found it had been reloaded. He then
accompanied the officer to the county
jail, where he was booked on a charge
of murder. He took his little son to
the jail with him.
Measure To Stop Auto Thieving
j j Atlanta.—At a meeting of the Geor
gia Sheriffs association in session at
: the Kimball House Indorsement was
given to a bill to register the sale of
all second hand automobiles with the
sheriff each county in which the trans
for or sale takes place. Also a propos¬
ed bill which wil tallow the sheriffs to
! sell automobile tags in each county
i for the purpose of keeping a ciose
check on all local cars was discussed,
This bill will be introduced into the
legislature and a committee was
pointed by the association to meet a
committee from tha house and
j to draw the bill aim arrange its
i duct ion.
Tenant Gets Verdict Over Landlord
Macon,—Mrs. Hattie L. Harris has
been . ............ awarded “ a verdict for two -----
sand dollars against Mrs. Ellen
J Bellamy. sand dollars The suit was alleged for five
damages to
i been sustained in injuries by
Harris when she stepped through
j defective part of the floor of a
which she rents from Mrs.
Blackberry Boll Weevil Appears
Eatonton.—A peculiar
current here threatens onp of the
eagerly anticipated fruit crops of
-the blackberry. From some
known source the word has
forth that blackberries are full of
I weevils and that it is unlucky to
them and unlawful to sell them.
j huvkste. who i.av sold them
i i la rly for years cannot be
to pick and market them as
fore. In the meantime lovers
blackberry pie. dumplings, jam
cordials are bemoaning the
THE CLEVELAND COUfUER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
Waycross Rows Over Sunday Papers
Wayeross.—Following a controversy
of several weeks between a local con¬
cern and Dan T. Cowart, Lead of the
Law and Order League of Waycross,
two warrants have been sworn out be¬
fore Judge J. L. Crawley against Ger¬
ald B. Knight and Dekle York, mem¬
bers of the company, who are accus¬
ed of unlawfuly conducting business
on Sunday by selling “newspapers,
stationery, books, pencils, inks, and
tablets, same not being works of ne¬
cessity or charity.” This is flatly de¬
nied by Knight, who states that since
the opening of his business some time
ago not one single article has been
sold from the store on the Sabbath
with the exception of Sunday newspa¬
pers. The controversy began several
weeks ago, when Rev. C. M. Ledbetter
—a member of the Law and Order
League of Waycross—entered the es¬
tablishment and in the name of the
league | forbade the sale of newspa
perg (jn g an( , gtated that if he
: request was not flomplled prosecution
' wou j,j f 0 n ow Knight, in the next
evening’s press, published a statement
of what had taken place in regard
to the sale of newspapers on Sunday,
arid asked the people of Waycross to
express their sentiments on the sit¬
uation.
Hero Memorial Fund Planned
Atlanta.—An active campaign to
I raise by public contributions a fund
.of $500,000 to erect an historical me
! moria , building t0 Georgia’s sons who
, ost thelr lives the war ,
recommended by the Georgia Histor
ical Commission in its report which
has just been submitted to Gover¬
nor Dorsey by Judge Andrew J. Cobb
of Athens, chairman. The building
is to be of Georgia stone, of impres¬
sive beauty and is to be located at or
near Atlanta. Owing to the absorp¬
tion of tbe public mind in the politi¬
cal contests of this year, the com¬
mission recommends that the cam¬
paign to raise this money be deferred
until after the presidential election
in November. Meanwhile the com¬
mission asks for an appropriation of
at least $15,000 from the legislature
to defray the expenses of the cam¬
paign. Prior to this appropriation, a
bill would have to be passed giving
the commision legal status and this:,
also is urged.
Tubercular Cattle Still Borught Here
Atlanta.—That considerable numbers
of tubercular cattle are even now ship-
ped into Georgia in spite of the rigid
application of the re-test on all arriv¬
als is shown by the report of the stagjt:
veterinarian on tuberculosis. He ad¬
vises partial reimbursement of hot# th$P
fide owners of tubercular cattle
has been slaughtered in the public in¬
terest. Before the state adopted the*
policy of re-testing shipped cattle, the
state veterinarian says. it and
come a dumping ground for unscrupu¬
lous breeders and dealers. With a
re-test made of all cattle shipped,
even when accompanied by a tubercu¬
lin test chart, the importation of dis¬
eased cattle from other states has been
greatly restricted. For 1919 out of
5.166 native cattle tested, only 41
showed a tubercular reaction, while
105 were tubercular out of 1,258 im¬
ported cattle examined.
Plan To Open Rivers For Navigation
Rome.—Capt. W. P. Lay states that
he contemplates calling the Coosa-Ala
bama River Improvement association
together in order to make plans for
going before congress with a scheme
to open the Coosa and Alabama rivers
to year-round navigation. The associ¬
ation has not met in several years be¬
cause of the adverse report made by
government engineers on the rivers,
hut since their reports were mostly
adverse because of the cost entailed
in making improvements suggested
and since much of the cost has been
eliminated by the certainty of the
building of vast power dams on the
Coosa, it is deemed proper to call the
body together at an early date.
Several Spanish War Pensioners
Atlanta.—Several thousand under) Geor- j
gians are entitled to pensions
the provisions of the bill recently
j passed by congress for the benefit of I
I Spanish war veterans. This was the
statement of Gen. J. Van Holt Nash, j
adjutant general of the state of Geor-1
gia, who announuees that he has a
supply of application blanks in his of
j fice Clares at the the law eapitol. General Nash de-!
j ' to be of the
one most
j j liberal urges all pension Georgia acts yet enacted. of He
veterans this war
who are pensionable under the act to
apply to him for the necessary forms
for filing application.
Penhill's Wife’s Death Accident
Savannah.—Aron Penhitl, a rest
dent of Thunderbolt, was discharged
1 by the court after a hearing
on mur
i der .......- charges. He * v had been -MT-ru held UUU for lur :
investigation into the death of his wife 1
j who bled to death several days ago I
j from penknife stabs. Penhill showed!
I to the court that he cut his wife ac-l
; cider.tally while trying to slash a man!
named Peter Robinson whom he came'
upon in company with his wife.
Former Policeman Jailed
Atlanta. — Detective T. O. Sturti
vant returned from Palmetto, Fl%,
| j with former Policeman F. A. Hulsey, j
who is under indictment in connec- j
tion with the theft of several auto
mobiles. Mrs. Hulsey accompanied j
her husband and tbe detective to At
! \ an ta. Hulsey recently obtained eon
: ruble publicity through a sensa
j tional Detectives escape Stnrtivant front his residence, and when
Campell is!
went to arrest him. Mrs. Hulsey officers!
: said have fought off the
to
while her husband fled- j '
THE WEEICS EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS OF 8TATE, NA
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOIJTJKE WORLD
A Condensed Record Of Happening*
Of Interest From All Points
Of The World
Foreign
Answering questions on France’s
near east policy, Premier Millerand
told the French chamber of deputies
that the government was not follow
ing a "policy of cannon shots,” hut
was limiting its military action to
that strictly necessary to meet the
conditions prevailing in Constantino¬
ple and Syria.
The German chancellor, Konstantin
Fehrenbaeh, has completed the for
mation of a cabinet. A Febhrenbach
cabinet was organized on June 21, but
the members resigned immediately at
ter formation when the Majority So¬
cialists refused to support it.
The Greek army has begun an of¬
fensive against the forces of Husta
pha Kemal Pasha, the Turkish Na¬
tionalist leader, according to an offi¬
cial statement issued by Greek head¬
quarters.
Riotous scenes occurred at the house
of representatives when the sitting of
the Cuban house was summarily sus¬
pended because of disorder, said to
have been caused by members of the
Liberal party. The house has been
unable to convene for several weeks,
because of what is alleged to have been
ft "legislative strike” on the part of
he Liberals, who are protesting agair st
the passage of the last session of the
Conservative measure amending the
Crowder electoral law so that coalition
of national political parties will be per¬
mitted.
Provisional President de la Huerta
of Mexico has invited forty newspa¬
pers of the United States to send rep¬
resentatives to study conditions in
Mexico, it has been announced.
Hungary has begun an energetic
boycott against Austria. Food barge3
on the way up the Danube from coun¬
tries to the east were stopped in Hun¬
garian waters. In pursuance of the
international boycott, traffic in direc¬
tion of Hungary is totally suspended.
A Reuter dispatch published in Lon¬
don says the labor delegates who went
to look over Soviet Russia report that
Socialism will be triumphant in G^eat
Britain Ion* before Russia has enter¬
ed the soesfilirilio domain.
“Hundreds of brides have been
doohied to a life of useless celibacy
through that infamous institution that
is known as mixed bathing.” This
statement is the nulcelus of a protest
by Councillor Donald Clark of Ton
bridge, Kent county, England, after a
debate as to whether or not mixed
bathing would be permitted. Clark
lost, and will not seek re-election, as
the county is a strong woman center.
Lloyds recently experienced “quite
an exciting day" as the result of a
statement of a United States senator
to the etrect of the American merchant
marine act, which appears to move the
center of American marine insurance
from London to New York.
Premier Lloyd George's demand that
Irish railwaymen handle munition
trains gives rise to an issue which
must be fought out. Many declare
the premier's attitude is a “bluff”
and that he is “too afraid of English
labor to give it effect.”
With armed hands battling for the
control of Londonderry, and the en
itre city in the grip of lawless ele¬
ments, a state of civil war exists ihat
may be ended only by the proclama¬
tion of martial law
—
Washington . .
Fried W. K Nielson of Nebraska
been appointed a solicitor in the
of state.
A report on the railroad strike sit¬
uation was laid before President Wil¬
at she cabinet meeting by Secre
tary Payne, acting in his capacity
general of the railroad ad¬
but action was delayed
Secretary Wilson had declared
situation was so improved that
by the government were unnec¬
Management of the national Republi¬
campaign was entrusted to an ex¬
committee of twenty-one mem¬
headed by Chairman Hays of the
*—— national committee. Seven
women have places on the executive
Rear Admiral Fletcher in charge
of the fourteenth naval district since
1918, has been transferred to Rio de
Janeiro and will begin duty thore
as senior commander of the American
naval mission to Brazil.
Investigation of public clinics estab¬
lished for the treatment of drug ad¬
dicts was ordered by the bureau of in
ternal revenue to determine if they
are operated in accordance with the
of the Harison anti-narcotic act.
„ . . must . . be abandoned , . , the ,
or
methods changed where the ambnla
treatment" is in use by which
drugs are issued to patients who are
permitted to administer the dosage
themselves. Instances have been
known of patients selling drugs so ob
tamed to other addicts.
President C. H. Markham of the Il¬
linois Central Lines, after an inves¬
tigation of the coal situation, says the
situation is likely to become serious
unless remedial measures are institut¬
ed immediately.
Protest against any increase in the
rates on iron ore has been made to
the interstate commerce commission
by 69 iron ore mining companies op
| erating in Minnesota, Wisconsin and
Michigan.
Damages asked by owners of mo¬
tor vehicles in collision with govern¬
ment mail trucks cannot be paid be¬
cause of absence of any funds for re¬
imbursement, the fourth assistant post¬
master general, Only an appropriation
by a special act of congress can meet
the situation. :
The Herrera government in Guate*
(mala, which succeeded that of Dr. Es-
1 trada Cabrera, bas been recognized |
by the United States, it is announced.
Circulars calling on American work¬
ers to refrain from participation in
the coming presidential election and
instead join a general strike, came into :
j j the hands of the department of justice !
recently. Investigation has been or
j dered to determine the origin of the !
j pamphlets American Anarchist which are Federated signed by Com- “The
I
mune Soviets.”
George Christian, secretary to Sena¬ i
tor Warren Gamaliel Harding, says i
the letter recently made public by
Frank P. Walsh, quoting the Repub¬
lican presidential nominee as favoring
Trieh independence, is undoubtedly
authentic.
;
John W. Abercrombie of Anniston, :
Ala., having resigned as solicitor of
the department of labor, Roland B. |
Mahany of New York bas been ap¬
pointed to succeed him.
Domestic
Seven persons were killed and two
probably fatally injured when an auto¬
mobile in which they were riding was
struck by an Illnoia Central passenger
train at a crossing ten miles west cf
Franklin, In., June 27. The party was
driving from Nashville, Indiana, to
Franklin. The driver lost control of
the machine as he neared the cross¬
ing and drove directly in front of the
approaching train.
Unless railroads divert ail open-top
cars to the transportation of coal for |
the next sixty days the entire country
will experience the most severe coal j
famine in the history of the country, |
is predicted by Dr. F. C. Honnold of |
Chicago, a recognized authority. |
Darkness forced the Larsen airplane, |
which left Omaha for New York, to
come to earth, fifteen miles east of l
Philadelphia, but not until all Amer¬ j
ican records for a non-stop flight had j
been shattered, according to one of
the passengers.
Both wets and drys have launched
their planks on the Democratic seas
of alcoholic differences, with a stormy
passage promised to the final harbor
of the convention floor at San Fran¬
cisco.
Several Iowa Democrats on the spe¬
cial train en route to the national eon
| | vention home for at San Francisco Thieves telegraphed j
| money. entered one
of the cars in the train at some place |
between Grand Junction, Colo., and
Green River. Wyo., and stole about a i
! thousand dollars. ;
1 In an airplane crash at Paris Island,
near Savannah, Ga., Lieut. Frederick
I Malthen, Lieut. S. E. St. George and
| Capt. Gustave Karow of Savannah
| were killed. I
The United States railroad labor
hoard will announce its decision on
the new wage scales to be granted
four million railroad workers on July
20. Officials of the railway brother¬
hoods, who waited anxiously for the
I hoard's announcement, said that this
! action had probably averted a wide¬
spread strike of railroad workers,
i which, they said, outlaw organizations
! had been planning to start June 26 at
j midnight.
Gov. A. R. Roberts of Tennessee an¬
nounces that he wiil call a special ses
; sion of the Tennessee legislature for
1 action on the federal suffrage amend
raent in ample time for the women to
; vote in the November election. This
announcement was made after the gov
| j ernor from was President shown Wilson a copy of a telegram
urging such
! action.
A volunter construction program
corps for the making and whittling of
i planks in the Democratic party has
been busy at San Francisco for seve
ral days, and it is believed their ef
forts will relieve the tense situation
prevailing.
The Northern Baptist convention
voted after a iengthy debate to termi
nate relations with the Interchurch
World Movement.
A search for knowledge that he
might “beat the game of life” and
with ... which , . to
earn more money care
i ter his mother, dying of tuberculosis,
caused the arrest in New \ork City,
j Benjamine Brines.. 20 years old.
machinist by day and New lork uni
versity student b> night He was
charged with the theft of a book from
the New York public library.
Window cleaners and waiters in
New York rated high above the ordi¬
nary grade of wage-earners when tes¬
timony was given at the trial of Har¬
ry Weiss, charged with keeping a
6 amb,in g house, that two of them had
test $2,000 each in a poker game there.
Sutfrage leaders express complete
disupointment v.'th the position of
Senatpr Warren G. Harding. Republi
can presidential candidate, on suffrage
after a delegation, led by officers of
the National Woman's party, had call
ed on him at his office and mterv**w.
d him.
READY
FOR “FLU”
Your Liver Active, Your
System Purified and Free From
Colds by Taking Calotabs,
the Nausealess Calomel
Tablets, that are De¬
lightful, Safe and
Sure.
Physicians and- Druggists are advis
their friends to keep their systems
and their organs in perfect
order as a protection against
return of influenza.. They know
a clogged up system and a lazy
favor colds, influenza and serious
To cut short a cold overnight and to
serious complications take one
at bedtime with a swallow of
all. No salts, no nausea,
griping, no sickening after effects.
morning your cold has vanished,
liver is active, your system is puri¬
and refreshed and you are feeling
with a hearty appetite for break
Eat what you please—no danger.
Calotabs are sold only in original
packages, price thirty-five cents.
druggist is authorized to refund
money if you are not perfectly
with Calotabs.—(Adv.)
—
One Good Reason.
“Why didn’t you show tight when
hank robbers came in?” asked
president
"Not iiim n.” replied the clerk. “The
is insured and I’m not.”
ASPIRIN
R..ue “Bayer” on Genuine
“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” is genu
Aspirin proved safe by millions
prescribed by physicians for over
years. Accept only an unbroken
package” which contains proper
to relieve Headache, Tooth
Earache, Neuralgia. Rheumatism,
and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12
cost few cents. Druggists also
larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin
trade mark Bayer Manufacture Mon
of'*Salicylicacid.—Adv,
Force of Habit
“Why is it he can never remember
that is wanted in this house?”
“Hard to say, I am sure, unless It Is
he used to be a popular res¬
waiter.”
ERUPTIONS ON THE FACE
unsightly and mar the appearance
many a woman whose face would
otherwise attractive. There is no
for this. Just get a box of Tet
and use it regularly and you will
surprised how quickly pimples,
itchy patches, etc., disappear
how soft and clear the skin be¬
Nothing better for eczema and
skin troubles than Tetterine.
by druggists or mailed for 50c. by
Co., Savannah, Ga.—Adv.
Another Class.
Knieker—Does Jones belong to the
poor or the new rich?
Rocker—He belongs to the new
99 OUT OF 100
the little ills such as Nasal Ca¬
Sunburn, Itching, or Soreness
may be quickly relieved by
Vacher-Balm which is harm¬
and cooling. Keep it handy,
avoid imitations.
If you cannot buy Vacher-Balm lo¬
send ;iOc in stamps for a tube,
E. W. Vaeher. Inc., New Orleans,
wanted.—Adv.
He Meant Cars.
Lawrence, age nine, was scanning
early edition of the News Monday
information on the progress of the
when ids mother asked him
anyone had been hurt yet.
“A es. ten have been killed so far,”
as the startling reply. “Twenty-five
the race and only fifteen are
running!”—Indianapolis News.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
that famous old remedy
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
oft
Use for 0ver30 Years.'
Cry for Fletcher’s Ca.-toria
An Alternative.
•‘Do you know where I can get a
of finish?”
"No, but I can tell you where you
get one maid.”
Ualf of haqpiness depends upon
we do, the other half on what
don’t.
Night nnd Morning.
Have Strong, Healthy
Eye*. If they Tire, Itch,
Smart or Bum, if Sore,
'i-./r _ C Irritated, Inflamed or
TOUR tYt3 Granulated, Refreshes. use Safe Murine for
Soothes, Write
or Adult At all Druggists. for
Eye Book. Maria* Er* Ca., CU**s: