Newspaper Page Text
WOMEN WHO
CftNNOT WORK
Read Mr*. Corley’s Letter and
Benefit by Her Experience
Edmund, S.C.— "I was run down with
nervousness and female trouble and suf
Ifered every month.
11 was not able to do
any work and tried a
lot of medicine, but
got no relief. I saw
your medicine adver¬
tised in a little book
that was thrown in
my door, and I had
not taken two bottles
of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Compound Vegetable before I
ing 1 could see it was help¬ and
able me. am all keeping work. house now I
am to do of my cannot
say done enough for for.your than medicine. doctor. It has I
more me any
have not paper enough to tell you how
much it has done for me and for my
friends. You may print this letter if
you wish.” — Elizabeth C. Corley,
care of A. P. Corley, Edmund, S. C.
the Ability privilege to stand of the the strong strain and of healthy, work is
but how our hearts ache for the weak
and daily sickly women struggling with theft
rounds of household duties, with
backaches, almost headaches, nervousness and
pain. Why every will movement the brings of letters a new
from not mass
women all over this country, which
we have been publishing, convince such
women that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege¬
table Compound will help them just aa
surely aa it did Mrs. Corley ?
Cuticura Soap
■IS 1DEAI,
For the Hands
Soip 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum ’.>c.
Love Letters.
"Cliolly can’t really love me.” “Why
do you say that, girlie?” “His let¬
ters switi to make sense.”
ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
Beware! Unless yon see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre¬
scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer
puckage for Colds, Headache, Neural¬
gia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As¬
pirin cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packages. Aspirin is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoacetlcacidester of Sullcylicactd,
—Adv.
He Did.
“Don't you think ‘Absolutely!’ is an
overworked word ?”
“Absolutely!”- Boston Transcript.
Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin.
On rising and retiring gently smear
the face with Cuticura Ointment.
Wash off Ointment In five minutes
with Cuticura Soap and hot water, it
Is wonderful sometimes what Cuticura
will do for poor complexions, dandruff,
Itching and red rough hands.—Adv.
There Is always room at the top of
a stepladder because people are afraid
to stand there.
Catarrh Can Be Cured
Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ¬
enced by constitutional conditions. It
therefore requires constitutional treat¬
ment. HALITS CATARRH MEDICINE
Is taken Internally and acts through
tiie Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of
the System. HALL'S CATARRH
MEDICINE destroys the .oundation of
the disease, gives the patient strength by
Improving the general health and assists
nature in doing its Circulars work.
All Druggists free.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio.
If you have nothing to worry about,
ask your wife; she can always supply
tiie deficiency.
Feel All Worn Out?
lias a cold, grip, or other infectious
diseuse sapped your strength? Do you
suffer backache, lack ambition, feel dull
and depressed? Look to your kidneys!
Physicians agree that kidney trouble
ofteu results from infectious disease.
Too often the kidneys doesn't are neglected be¬
cause tiie sufferer realize they
have broken down under the strain of
filtering disease created poisons from
the blood. If your back is bad, your
kidneys act irregularly, and you feel nil
run down, use Monti's Kidney Pills.
Doan's have helped thousands. Ask
your neighbor!
A Florida Case
W, -IV Boling,
prop, of blacksmith
stiop. 117 E. Park
St., Bradentown,
Fla., says: “About
eight years ago I
was in terribli
agony with turn
bago I went around it|
like an old man;
felt as if a knife
were sticking me
In mv back. 1
couldn’t turn over!
In bed without waking the whole fam¬
ily I used different remedies with no
relief. I finally took Doan's Kidney
Pills and six boxes entirely cured me.”
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box
DOAN'S
FOSTER -M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
THE WEEK'S EVENTS
|
IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOUTJHE WORLD
A Condensed Record Of Happening#
Of Interest From All Points
Of The World
Foreign—
Misunderstanding and ignorance of
the real policy of the United States
concerning the Monroe doctrine is the
greatest difficulty in the way of or¬
ganizing a Pan-American league, said
Dr. Baltazar Brun, president of Uru¬
guay, in an interview with newspa¬
per correspondents of North America
at Montevideo a few days ago.
Greece may extend her boundaries—
on paper—so as to include practically
ail of the ex-Turkish Levant; she may
occupy the entire coastline of the Ae¬
gean and Marmora seas, with the act¬
ive or noncommittal assistance of the
allies, but the long-dreamed of Hel
lenization of the former Byzantine em¬
pire is virtually impossible. This is
the firm conviction of enlightened and
unprejudiced oficials in Smyrna.
Though the Sinn Feiners generally
reject the home rule act, their organi¬
zation has not yet officially determined
its line of tactics in relation to it.
Comparison of the prices of daily ne¬
cessities, such as bread, meats, milk,
sugar, butter and vegetables, in Eng¬
land, America and Japan, will show the
highest prices paid in Japan, says tho
Tokyo Osaka Mainichi.
Opposition charges of government
irregularities in the opium traffic in
the Kwantung leased territory wero
the basis of remarks by Representative
M. Koba of the Nationalist group in tho
Japanese diet at Tokyo recently.
The United States chamber of com¬
merce in Argentina reports that coal
imports into Argentina from the Unit¬
ed States during 1920 were seven times
greater than those from Great Brit¬
ain.
France has fallen from third to
fourth place as an air power, being now
after the United States, England and
Germany, according to Rene Quinton,
aviation expert of Paris, who founded
the French Aeronautical League.
The Spanish State Railway adminis¬
tration has invited bids for 3,500 rail¬
road cars and several hundred locomo¬
tives.
It is understood that Japan has de¬
cided to dispatch a battleship and four
destroyers ot Kamchatka to protect
Japanese fisheries in that far eastern
republic.
The latest report is that. Petrograd
manufacturers are manufacturing
clothes out of rags,
says a dispatch from Hamburg to Ber¬
lin. Workers in other shipyards unit
work and began organizing mass dem¬
onstrations, according to the dispatch.
Heavy property losses are reported in
many cities, but few people injured.
Under advice of government otfi
eials from Berlin overwhelming Germany victory was quiet in j
despite the
the upper Silesian plebiscite. Fig¬
ures announced by Foreign Minister
vou Simons said the rich territory went
to Germany by a vote of 713,700 to
Poland’s 460,700.
Washington
Thomas R. Marshall, former vice
president, and ex-Seuator Nathan B.
Scott of West Virginia have been ap¬
pointed to the Lincoln memorial com¬
mission, it is announced at the white
house. The positions carry no rontpen
sat ion whatever.
The last message from the five naval
balloonists who have been missing
state that their supplies were exhaust¬
ed as they continued to drift help¬
less south over the Gulf of Mexico,
reports to the navy department reveal.
The derailment of a Missouri Pa
cific passenger train near Gulpha,
j Ark, oil February 10, which resulted
iu the death of two employees, the in
i jury of 61 passengers, three employees
; aud a trespasser, was due to excessive
I speed of the train in rounding a curve,
j the bureau of safety of the interstate
j commerce commission announces.
The following recess appointments
| i were announced at the White House;
John J. Esch, Wisconsin, to be a mem
i ber of the interstate commerce com
I mission. Dwight L. Davis, St. Louis,
I Mo., to be a director of the war i'i
| nance corporation.
America owes France nothing, not
j withstanding the claim of The Paris
S Eclair that we owe that nation $90.
j I 000,000 debts. from A search the old by Revolutionary the assistant war
sec
! rotary of the treasury reveals that we
j owe nothing.
A proclamation convening congress
iu special session at noon, April 11.
“to receive such communication as
may be made by the executive,” was
issued by President Hardiug.
Difficulty is being encountered by
J the war department iu getting service
I men of the war with Germany to take
the victory medals which congress *tu
; tborized as a mark of special distinc-
1 tion -
j j released The entire from state quarantine of Texas for has sheep been
i scabies.
j evader Grover notorious Cleveland for Bergdoll. his efforts the draft
’ to es
j cape service iu the American army,
t will, in all probability, be brought back
from Germany and forced to face the
music of a courtmarital.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
President Harding has decided to
have an exhaustive investigation made
of the manner, which the government
is caring for disabled war veterans.
Within a few days, it is announced at
the white house, he will select a spe¬
cial committee to conduct the inquiry.
Resumption of trade relations with.
Soviet Russia will depend upon Sat¬
isfactory assurances that “fundamental
changes are contemplated, involving
due regard for the protection of per¬
sons and property and establishment of
conditions essential to the mainte¬
nance of commerce,” Secretary of
State Hughes recently said in a mes¬
sage to the Russian Soviet representa¬
tives at Reval.
Representatives or tne Southern Tar¬
iff association will be given a special
hearing by the house ways and means
committee April 20, to present claims
for protection desired on products of
the South. John H. Krby, presi¬
dent of the association, has called a
meeting of the managers of fifty-seven
industries affiliated with it, to be held
in Arlington, April 18 and 19, for
a preliminary conference on the argu¬
ments to be given the committee in
favor of including the southern prod¬
ucts in the new general tariff bill now
being drafted.
The high cost of housing has been
tackled by Herbert Hoover, secretary
of commerce. He was considering re¬
cently names of architects and experts
he expected to name upon a commis¬
sion to study housing problems.
Five hundred permits to purchase
liquor were stolen from the New York
office of the federal prohibition di¬
rector March 22, Prohibition Commis¬
sion Kramer announces. The permits
were forms 1410-A and bore the serial
numbers 118,501 to 119,000 inclusive.
A scientific plan for reapportion
ment of representation in the house is
being prepared by an advisory com¬
mittee of the census bureau and 'will
he submitted to congressional chair¬
men when the extra sesesion of con¬
gress convenes next month.
Former President Wilson suffered
an acute attack of indigestion recent¬
ly, which caused hurried calls for med¬
ical assistance. It is said, however,
that he has entirely recovered from
the attack.
Military allotments and alowances
under the war risk Insurance act will
expire automatically July 31, Comp
troler Warwick of the treasury holds, in
a ruling just made public.
“We are going to get Bergdoll if it
is possible to get him,” Secretary
Weeks declared recently In discussing
the case of the Philadelphia draft evad
er now In Germany. “1 don't believo
we will recognize any statute of lim¬
itation in his case if one should exist.”
Domestic
Charged by the state with willful
neglect of duty (instructed his deputies
not to enforce the prohibition law and
permitting males and females to oc¬
cupy the same cells), Sheriff John
Strength of Etmore county, Alabama,
lias been commanded hv the state su¬
preme court to appear in Montgomery
May 2 and answer to the allegations.
Tiie Bank of Ringgold, at Ringgold.
Gu,, was recently broken into by yegg
men, who failing in their attempt to
blow open the vault doors, dug through
a thiek brick wall, effecting an en
trance. They got away. No clue,
Two masked men late at night re¬
cently held up a Denison. Texas, post
office messenger white he was on his
way from a railroad station to the
postoffice with a quantity of mail and
forced him to accompany them to the
outskirts of the city, where they rob¬
bed him.
George Washington Knight, 22, at
New Brunswick, N. J., was found guilty
of murdering Mrs. Edith Wilson, a
church organist, and will die during
the week of May 2.
All efforts to locate the United States
navy free balloon and five men miss¬
ing from Pensacola since it left on a
practice flight have been unavailing.
Carrier pigeons received on the Flor¬
ida coast brought messages that the
balloon had fallen into the gulf and
' v;ls slowly sinking.
Barrron Field, the last of the three
aviation fields established at hurt
"orth. loxas. bv iln> British and l nit
,
States governments during the war,
j bave been ordered sold at auction.
i lhree railroad presidents, members
j <>f tbp former labor committee of the
Association of Railway Executives,
j railroad be summoned labor board to testify in Chicago before if the
j request of employees is granted, to a
as
why they have changed their views
: since the government released the rail
roads.
j A suit to determine what au
I thority the federal railroad labor board
may have in backing up its ruling that
! railroads may not reduce wages until
after conference with employees has
j been filed in the federal district court
j at Columbus. Ohio, of by the attorneys four repre
seating employees subsid
iary lines of the New York Central
railroad.
Fire of undetermined origin recent¬
ly destroyed the wholesale fruit and
storage warehouse of Hurst of Co., at
Lexington, Ivy. Damage $1S6.Q0O.
Five men shackled hand and foot
and guarded by armed policemen are
under arrest in New Orleans pending
their transportation to New York.
w here they are wanted in connection
with the Wall street bomb explosion of
j September 16. which cost two-score
Uves alid millions of dollars in damage
to property in the heart of the t'inan
cial see tion.
j X ews has been received at Jasper,
Ala that chief of Police Hurd of
Dora a mining town, and H. N. Ham
, mer a mine r. were slain in a pistol
j duel on the streets of Dora recently.
BATTLES RAGING
IN OCCUPIED ZONE
COMMUNISTS CONTROL THE RAIL
ROADS RUNNING FROM
DUSSELDORF
14 MEN KILLED AT ESSEN
Safety Police Oppose Revolutionaries
In Five Cities—U. S. Troops
Rush To Restore Order
Berlin.—Red revolt, which the gov¬
ernment had apparently considered
crushed in central Germany, has
flamed up through the Ruhr district
and is running wild through the ter¬
ritory now held by the allied troops
of occupation.
Battles have been fought in five cit¬
ies of this zone between the safety
police and armed Communists. Four¬
teen men were killed at Essen and
forty-six were wounded. Numerous
deaths are reported from Dortmund.
The Communists are now In control
of the railway lines running from
Dusseldorf—one of the three cities
seized under the recent decision of
the allied council at London—to Co¬
logne and to Elberfield.
The Communists are now in control
of the railway lines running from Dus¬
seldorf—one of the three cities seiz¬
ed under the recent decision of the
allied council at London—to Cologne
and to Elberfield.
Martial law has been declared at
Dusseldorf and Muenster.
The affected cities are Essen, home
of the great Krupp gun works; Met
temann, Velbert, Homborn and Dort¬
mund. the most serious clashes taking
place in the first named city.
Berlin is stiil quiet, but the popula¬
tion and government are apprehen¬
sive. The police have established a
war-time regime at Halle, where they
have twice arrested American corre¬
spondents who were trying to send
messages to their newspapers in Eng¬
lish. No person is permitted to talk
over the telephone in anything but
German, and the eye of suspicion is
cast on all foreigners.
Communists in the west of Germa¬
ny, according to the opinion of ob¬
servers, probably will prove far more
difficult to handle than those of cen¬
tral Germany, who scattered before
the police and safety troops.
A telegram from Coblenz says that
a communistic uprising occurred in the
American bridgehead area, at Monta
baur, six miles northeast of Ehren
breltstein. A riot call was answered
by the provost marshal and the Amer¬
ican military police were dispatched
to Montabaur to restore order.
The rioting activities in the Com¬
munist uprising in central Germany
are concentrating now on Bitterfeld,
where the extremists have succeeded
in disarming the local police and oc¬
cupying the public buildings, accord¬
ing to an official communique issued.
During March 27, says the statement,
bandits looted the bank and the post
office at Sangerhausen and put the
local telegraph office out of commis¬
sion.
A Halle dispatch announces that
Sangerahusen, southwest of Eisleben,
has been occupied and is under con¬
trol of federal forces.
Through trains which normally tra¬
verse the Halle section are being re¬
routed owing to sabotage of the track¬
age and bridges by the Communists,
who are continuing to spread terror
as they proceed westward and north¬
ward from Halle, with the security po¬
lice at their heels.
The extent to which a general strike
movement is likely to develop as a se¬
quel to the present outbreak could not
be determined as the workers every¬
where are taking their Easter holiday.
$384,554,941 Assets Of Ford Company
Lansing, Mich.—Total assets of $3S4.-
554,941.65 on December 31. 1920, are
shown in the annual report of the Ford
Motor company filed with the secre¬
tary of state. Cash on hand, including
deposits in banks is given as $13,557,-
244.51, and the value of credits owing
to the company is placed at $54,438,-
633.50. Liabilities of the company on
unsecured indebtedness are shown as
| $143,025,300.61. The report shows
that 95,321 shares of the company's
stock are owned by Henry Ford; 71.911
i by E. B. Ford and 5,413 by Mrs. Ford.
Disarmament Motion To Be Presented
Washington. — Resolutions for a
world disarmament conference will be
presented to President Harding and
leaders in congress soon by the Worn
an's World Disarmament committee,
The resolutions were adopted at a
recent mass meeting held under tha
auspices of the committee at which
Senator Borah of Idaho spoke. The
senator led the fight for disarmament
in the last congress, said cessation of
naval competition between the great
world powers would lighten the heavy
tax burden.
’Quake Tremors Shown In Washington
Washington.—Earthquake tremors
characterized as “very severe" recent¬
ly were recorded on seismographs at
Georgetown university. This indicat¬
ed that the distance from Washington
was nineteen hundred miles. The dis¬
turbance began at 2:55 in the morning
and lasted until five o’clock in the
morning, with the maximum activity
at three-one o'clock in the morning.
There were no reports from other parts
of the world, and the inference is that
seismographs at Washington are the
only recorders of the incident.
PROVED EFFECTIVE BY A
FIFTY YEARS TRIAL
The most widely used remedy in the
world to overcome the stagnating
catarrh. Catarrh it ^
effects of
silent and insidiou* in its
ravages, invades nearly ^ FOR
every household and CATARRH
hovert like a petti* AND CATARRHAL
lence every, CONDITIONS
where.
It §trikea at tha root of ca
txrrhal trouble, by itimulatine
the digestion, enriching the blood,
toning up the nervoua system and
toothing the raw and inflamed mucous
membranes. Pe-ru na seta every organ to
y working grroperty and gives strength, vigor
and pep to the whole body. Try it, and like
thousands ot others, learn what it mesn, to be well.
r EVERYWHERE TABLETS OR LIQUID
80LD
And How Many There Are!
An old fool is one who thinks that
when a pretty girl smiles at him she’s
flirting instead of laughing at him.—
Toledo Blade.
Important to all Women
Readers of this Paper
Thousands upon thousands of women
have kidney or bladder trouble and never
suspect it.
Women's complaints often prove to be
nothing else but kidney trouble, or the
result ot kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy con¬
dition, they may cause the other organs
to become diseased.
You feay suffer pain in the back, head¬
ache and loss of ambition.
Poor health makes you nervous, irrita¬
ble and may be despondent; it makes any
one so.
But hundreds of women claim that Dr,
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, hy restoring
health to the kidneys, proved to be just
the remedy needed to overcome such
conditions
Many send for a sample bottle to see
what Swamp-Root, the great kidney,
liver and biaddet medicine, will do for
them By enclosing ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer A Co., Binghamton. N, Y., you
may receive sample size bottle hy Parcel
Post Yon can purchase medium and
targe size bottles st. all drug stores.— Adv.
Their Method.
“In the days of the cave man,” re¬
marked the man on the car, "the girls
wore their hair loose down the back,
so they would be easy to catch.”—To¬
ledo Blade,
WOMEN! USE “DIAMOND DYES”
Dye Old Skirts, Dresses, Waists,
Coats, Stockings, Draperies—
Everything.
Each package of “Diamond Dyes”
contains easy directions for dyeing any
article of wool, silk, cotton, linen, or
mixed goods. Beware! Poor dye
streaks, spots, fades, and ruins mate¬
rial by giving It a "dyed-look.” Buy
“Diamond Dyes” only. Druggist has
Color Card.—Adv.
Cut in, All Right.
Redd—What’s the matter with your
face ?
Greene—Oh, I was being shaved to¬
day and 1 started to tell the barber
n story.
“I see, and he ‘cut in,’ did he?”
Important to Mother*
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and IUU children, (.UllUIcUi and mill see bvt that llltll It 11
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria
Says a sage: “Give me the man
who whistles at his work.” AH right,
old chap; you can have him.
Getting into heaven doesn't worry a
man half so much as trying to keep
out of the other place.
/fuJCKY^ IvSTRIKE//
\\qts toasted^/#
CIGARETTE
No cigarette has
the same delicious
j flavor as Lucky
j Strike. Because
j Lucky Strike is the
j toasted cigarette.
!
j ZZZ L.al
j *#
1
|
j For CROUP, COLDS,
j INFLUENZA & PNEUMONIA
j Sal Mother? re convenient. should keep When a jar Croup. of Brame’* Influenza Vapomeutha Pneu¬
or
monia threaten* thi* delightful *ai?e rubbed well Into
the tanoat. cheat and under the arm*, will relieve the
cbokiai. break coageiuoa and promote restful sleep.
msm
will box sum mi asmss
3fcv 60s, $1.20 tiding sfrra *r sea! maiJ fcf
Brame Drug Co. N. Wilkesboro. N« C#
Ml * Eyas. If they Tire, Itch,
roe t Smart or Burn, if Sore,
Vaii»» lUUR EVrC Liu Irritated, Granulated, Inflamed Murine or
use
often. Soothaa, Refreshes. Safe for
Infant or Adult At all Druggists. Write for
Free Eye Book. H arise Eye Rtaedy Ca., Qtap
HOW DOCTORS
TREAT COLDS
ANDJHE FLU
First Step in Treatment Is a Brisk
Purgative With Calotabs, the
Purified and Refined Calomel
Tablets that are Nausea¬
less, Safe and Sure.
Doctors have found by experience
that no medicine for colds and influ¬
enza can be depended upon for full ef¬
fectiveness until the liver is made thor¬
oughly active. That is why the first
step in the treatment is the new, nausea¬
less colomel tablets called Calotabs,
which are free from the sickening and
weakening effects of the old style calo¬
mel. Doctors also point out the fact
that an active liver may go a long way
towards preventing influenza factors and is one
of the most important in en¬
abling the patient to successfully with¬
stand aa attack and ward off pneu¬
monia.
One Calotab on the tongue at bed
timo with a swallow of water—that’s
all. No salts, no nausea nor the slight¬
est interference with your eating, pleas¬
ure or work. Next morning your cold
has vanished, your liver is active, your
system is purified, and you are feeling
fine, with a hearty appetite for break¬
fast. Druggists sell Calotabs only in
original sealed packages, price thirty
five centq. Your money will be cheer¬
fully refunded if you do not find them
delightful.—(Adv.)
Poorly Arranged.
Some things seem poorly arranged.
A man is generally able to pocket his
pride, but a woman who has more
pride has few pockets.—Boston Tran
script.
16799
DIED
in New York City alone from kid
ney trouble last year. Don’t allow
yourself to become a victim by
neglecting pains and aches. Guard
against this trouble by taking
COLD MEDAL
CAPSULES
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric acid troubles.
Holland’s National Remedy since 1696.
All druggists, three sizes.
Look for the name Gold Medal ob every box
aod accept do imitation
USED EN ONE FAMILY
FOR YEARS
Bellepoint, W. Va.—“It affords ms
great pleasure to have the privilege to
make public thia
statement in be¬
half of Dr, Pierce’s
medicines I cannot
Tecommend them
too highly to the
public. We have
used them in our
family for years
and have reaped
good results. We
have always found
the ‘ Golden Medical
Discovery’ superior
to any other tonic, as it is a wonderful
system builder. I can cheerfully rec¬
ommend it to all like sufferers. ’ E. J,
CARPER.
Send 10 cents to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, N.Y., for trial package.
OXID1NE IN HOT WATER
New Method Discovered for Wxrdixx
off Colds sad Flu.
Put a tablespoonful of OX1DINE in a half glass
or hot water and drink in the same manner as
you would a hot toddy. It will make you feel
hotter almost immediately and a similar dose
three times a day will purify your blood and
strengthen degree. your resistance to a very marked
OXID1NE tones up the entire system.
60c at your druggist’s. Adv.
DROPSY ~ ~ lievedina Short WEEK treated breathing few FREE hours; one re
; PUn, £"- th 5 blood ’ ■trens-thens the
!-. C8LL0M t . L.. . S DB - Y A 0 t f PST In - REMEDY for Free Trial Trratm.nl.
C0., Dept E.0.,*TLANTA GIL
Ladies and Gentlemen
Demonstrate 3 in 1 toiiet preparation. All
or spare time. Working sample free. Get
yours NOW. We're waiting. THE UTHGLO
COMPANY, 37 East Fair St., Atlanta. Ga.
SANTO DOMINGO—BAND OF OI’PORTE
NITY. ^January, February and March issues
i of the Santo Domingo Review with illustra¬
tions and a halftone engraving of the Ruins
of the Era of Christopher Columbus, post¬
age free, 25c. SANTO DOMINGO REVIEW,
i 246 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, New York.
INDIAN HERBS
Six months' treatment for Liver and Kidney
Troubles, $1 prepaid. INDIAN HEP.B MED¬
ICINE CO., Box 466, MEMPHIS, TENN.
MEN AND WOMEN AGENTS-—Big Profits
in Hosiery. Make your own prices Earn
what you want. Lowest prices to distributing
agencies and mail-order houses. Price List
FREE Write Reuben Berman, 596 Broad¬
way, New York.