Newspaper Page Text
You Heel Strength J
[ w>overtt>tsetfcecooghB, catarrhal diseases of winter, cold* and otb
healthy circulation, throw nerreaand^^^^B tmt the
wastes, tone up »the the nerves am
im. mnm ilk fight oifef the catarrh^ catarrh^ #• Stagna
it ti oiwot
Then w 1
will ba
ao ter¬
rors,^ A FUSED
BY
^THOUSANDS
Whitta digestion, ro
mr "clears gulatcs the bowel*,
away all catarr¬
hal inflammation. It
builds up the rtrength by
[enabling ed to property the organs do their concent' work.
Thousands tartily to its value
after protracted sickmaa, an
attack of Grip or Spanish In¬
fluenza.
The idea] medicine in the
house for everyday ills.
SOLO EVERYWHERE
TABLETS M LIQUID
Fraud!
When a Mobile doctor came to visit
the Robinson family bv whom he had
boon summoned In* found .Mrs. Robin¬
son in bed, her dusky face decorated
with bandages. Mr. Robinson was sit¬
ting In stolid misery by the bedside.
“Cheer up. Ham,” said the M. D,
",She’ll null through all right."
“Don' yt>’ go try in’ To cheer me up,"
answered Mr. Robinson, darkly, “fo’
it’s impossible, doctor. Ileah Ah lias
her. Insured agirtst accidents of all
kinds only fo’ days ago and paid down
nudi $5, an, befo’ de week is out she
falls downstairs wid a bucket of coal
and now look at her, nil busted from
end to end:" American Legion
Weekly,
MOTHER! MOVE
CHILD’S BOWELS WITH
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
Hurry, mother! Even a sick child
loves the ‘fruity” tuste of “California
Eig Syrup” and it never falls to open
the bowels. A teaspoonful today may
prevent a sick child tomorrow, If con¬
stipated, bilious, feverish, fretful, has
cold, colic, or If stomach is sour,
tongue coated, breath bad, remember a
good cleansing of the little bowels is
often all that Is necessary.
Ask your druggist for genuine “Cnli
fornia Fig Syrup" which has directions
for babies and children of all ages
printed on bottle. Mother! You must
*say “California" or you may get uu
toil tat fon tig syrup.—Advertisement,
Not Altogether Conquered.
The airman was boasting about ids
calling.
“At last," be said, "man has crowned
ids work. After conquering the land,
mastering the »«m, and immessing the
tides, he 1ms tvimpiered fhe air. We
airmen represent tin* final achievement
of mankind."
"Who’s conquered the air?" retorted
one of Ids hearers.
“We have.” repeated the airman,
blandly.
“Oh, have you?" replied the other.
"Well, jump out of a window six floors
high ami see who’s boss?"
Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin.
On rising and retiring gently smear
the face with Cuticura Ointment.
Wash off Ointment In five minutes
with Cuticura Soup and hot water. It
is wonderful sometimes what Cuticura
will do for poor complexions, dandruff,
Itching and red rough bunds.—Adver<
Using.
Tungstic Carbide.
Tungstic carbide is almost ns bard
ns the diamond, which is still the
hardest substance known. By a proc¬
ess of rolling or forging, and by the
addition of carbon, German metal¬
lurgists hope to make this substance
even harder than the diamond.
Of course
you know
the reason
why millions
of men like
Lucky Strike
Cigarette
—because
it’s toasted
which seals
in the real
Burley taste
C /> Ovyeadeed **
TO PROVIDE WORK
FOR NATION’S IDLE
MEASURES TO PROVIDE WORK
FOR INVOLUNTARY IDLE
ALREADY PLANNED
HARDING OPENS CONFERENCE
Aid Of States And Municipalities Te
Be Sought In Providing Jobs
For Workers
Washington.—“Al! America” must
co-operate in solving the unemploy¬
ment problem, said President Harding,
addressing the opening session of the
unemployment conference.
"A erystalization of much valuable
public thought on this matter would
have lasting value in the education of
our people,’’ said Secretary of Com¬
merce Hoover.
So the conference is to be open to
the public that "All America” may be
In on its deliberations and know what
it is to do. Public hearings will be
held on all subjects under discussion,
the first that on unemployment, figures.
President. Harding has spoken the
word and Secretary Hoover has taken
hold ot the machinery for starting one
of the most important domestic read¬
justment efforts of the administration
—providing work for the nation's idle
and a breath of optimism for the na¬
tions’ business.
Both of these leaders, in addresses
to the first session of the unemploy¬
ment conference, bespoke confidence
In the outcome and a demand for prac¬
ticable measures. Both declared there
must be no drafts uppn the public
treasury. The “Dole" system practiced
ill European countries to relieve the
worklesB, Hoover denounced as the
"most vicious" in the world.
The initial words having !>een
spoken and the organization of the con¬
ference having been completed with
Hoover as chairman, it is now possible
| to set forth the measures administration for relief and con
j tempiated by the to
; be effected, if possible, by the group
! of distinguished Americans here, call
j ed for this Important duty from till
walks of business life.
[ Briefly, here is the program:
1. Hold open hearings to establish
the exact unemployment as to num¬
bers, classes and locations affecteil
Labor leaders and the department of
labor have declared there are 6.000,000
idle in the country today. Independent
statistics, compiled by the department
of commerce and other business agen¬
cies, declare there are less titan 3,-
500,000 without work. Reporting of
slowed the higher down unemployment buying, manufacturing figures hsu^ 4
and has had a detrimental influence on
business till down the tine, deWgftM re¬
port. So it was deemed advisable at
the outset to correct this misapprehen¬
sion and immediately strike a shaft of
optimism into the present business de¬
pression.
2. Employment bureaus are to reo
onimend tor establishment in all lead¬
ing cities where unemployment is high.
The work of these bureaus will involve
the registration by municipalities of all
men who desire work and can’t find it.
Only local residents, not transients,
will he so registered.
S. State and municipal executives,
after this registration is completed and
classified, will be urged to co-operate
with municipal and state departments
to put as many to work as possible on
improvement, contemplated new proj¬
ects. and seek the co-operation of local
Industries and others in adding to their
employment. employment in
4. To obtain add«|d will
Industries, manufacturers be urg¬
ed to adopt emergency measures such
as will shorten the work day a given
per cent for those now employed, in
order to permit of a corresponding per¬
centage of increase in the nunihe" of
employees. This would entail perhaps
a reduction of wages, corresponding to
the reduced hours, for those now em¬
ployed, but It would provide against
suffering for thousands who are out ot
work.
Hearing Waived For Mrs. Minnie Dorr
Akron. Ohio.—Attorneys for Mrs.
Minnie L. Derr, charged with second
degree murder in connection With the
death of her husband, A. R. Derr, Ak¬
ron business man. waived preliminary
bearing in police court and was bound
over to the grand jury under $20,000
bond. Mrs. Derr remained silent
throughout the court proceedings.
Negro Begs Sheriff To Hang Him
Jackson. Miss. — Henry Martin,
negro convicted of murder, whose
death sentence is pending on appeal
before the supreme court, is making
frantic appeals to Sheriff 1- B. Wil¬
liams to come on and hang him right
away. "I just can't stand it any long¬
er," Martin told the sheriff recently.
"This suspense is killing me. I-et’s
forget about the courts and have it
over with." This is perhaps the most
unusual request ever made, but there is
no doubt whatever of the sincerity of
the negro.
Used Patrol To Deliver Whiskey
Chicago.—Evidence that whiskey
had been delivered' from bootleggers
to their customers-in the police patrol
of the Grand Crossing precinct, is in
the hands of federal authorities, the
district attorney's office announced re¬
cently. An extra charge of *5 a rasa
was assessed for use of the patrol
and a uniformed escort of patrolmen.
Assistant District Attorney Merenskv
-aid. The Chicago chief of police is
firmly convinced that, over fifty per
•eat of the patrolmen are in league
.vith the bootleggers.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND,
WONDERFUL GAIN IN
WEIGHT REPORTED
Young Woman Only Weighed 76
Pounds—Now Weighs Over 100
and Is Gaining Every Day.
“Before I began taking Tanlac I only
weighed 70,pounds, I now weigh over
one hundred and am gaining every
day,” said Miss LaRue Davis of Chat¬
tanooga, Tenn.
“I bought my first bottle of Tanlac
at Gas City, Ind., and it helped me so
much that I continued using it. I have
always been very delicate and suffered
a great deal from stomach trouble and
rheumatism. I rarely ever had any ap¬
petite and simply could not relish any¬
thing. I fell off until I only weighed
76 pounds and was so thin I looked
perfectly awful. This is the condition
I was in when I began taking Tanlac.
“Oh, I feel so different now. Even
my complexion is improved. My appe¬
tite is good and I can hardly get
enough to eat. Tanlac Is simply grand
and 1 can truthfully say it is the only
medicine that has ever done me any
good."
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
every where.—Advertisement.
Preferred to Pay the Fine.
One .Saturday morning a little boy
told the children's librarian that he
had a book at home that should be
returned to the library that day.
“But how much would the fine be
If I kept the library book until Mon¬
day?" be asked her.
“It would be two cents, Jimmy, but
you don't wish to pay a fine. You
live such a little way from here. Why
don’t you run borne and get the hook ?”
she suggested.
“No siree,” said the -boy. “1 don’t
want to go home. I’ll get a bath!"
Like a man, and you will believe at
least half of ids boasts.
WIFE TAKES
HUSBAN DSAD VICE
And Is Made Well Again
by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Springfield, Maas.—“The doctor told
my nusbqjid that 1 had to have an oper
[ation, otherwise I
would be a sickly
woman and could not
have any more chil¬
dren on account of
my weakened con¬
dition. 1 refused to
have My husband the operation. asked
[roe “tokham’a to try Lydia-lL Vsjfca
de Compound timoe
if it would For the not help first
me.
............... four months I could but little work,
do
had to lie down most of the time, was
nervous but and could eat always hardly reminding anything,
my husband was
me to take the Vegetable Compound,
which I did. Of my eight children this
last one was the easiest birth of all and
I am thankful for your Vegetable Com¬
pound. when I I recommend it to my friends
hear them complaining about
their ills.”—Mrs. M. Natale, 72 Fre
homes, and after reading Mrs. Natale s
letter one can imagine how this home
health. was transformed Every by her restoration from to
woman who suffers
It is surely worth
SQUEEZED
TO DEATH
When the body begins to stiffen
and movement becomes painful it
is usually an indication that the
kidneys are out of order. Keep
these organs healthy by taking
COLD MEDAL
21333SI13
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric acid troubles.
Famous since 1696. Take regularly and
keep in good health. In three sizes, all
druggists. m Guaranteed as represented.
Look for th name Cold Medal on every box
and accept no imitation
'ihJlykAA
KING PIN
PLUG TOBACCO
Known as
"that good kind”
c Iry it—and you
will know why
Cuticura Soap
■ is IDEAL
For the Hands
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 mi 50c, Talcum 25c.
ei&P sore, Don't inflamed, treat smart- 1 J
i* “ pevl” in by hand. £ | Ej*
A soothmg.effect- j
r e. safe remedy is
living Without
God
By REV. H. OSTSOM, D. D.
Extension Department. Moody
Bible institute, Chicago.
TEXT.—Having no hope and without
God in the world.—Eph. 2:lz.
How far is the lost man lost? Gan
he locate hitnseif and say: There is
where I might be
but here is where
I am? Is the de¬
if! tailing of the ex¬
■ tent of ills ‘ ost
condition line
enough and exact
enough fur him to
make an accurate
calculation as to
its significance?
Let us see.
- jjn r 1. He is lost
J WWm from the knowl¬
edge o, uimself.
When the man in the San Francisco
horror walked about the street saying
that he had saved a million dollars
from the tire in the little satchel he
carried, the policeman bade him open
the satchel. There was only a fire
shovelful of ashes. That was all. The
poor mnn had become delirious, and
that was the reason he stated that 't
shovelful of ashes was u million dol¬
lars.
And the lost man in sin lias failed
to find his actual moral assets. One
look at Jesus (.‘hirst and what it cost
to redeem him will do more to ac¬
quaint a man with himself than years
of argument about his own orderly be¬
havior. As the cheeks may bear the
fiusli of health when the heart is real¬
ly stowing down to death, so one may
be cheated about his soul's standing
tiefore God. He is “being deceived.”
Saul "verily thought” he ought to do
what amounted to persecuting Jesus
until he came where he knew himself
to be the “chief of sinners.”
2. The lost man is lost from the
knowledge of God.
Knowledge ABOUT God may be Ids,
like the knowledge about home com¬
forts to a man starving and freezing
in a pathless forest. He may know
about, God but he does not know God.
But the saved man lias found a new
friend, he is swathed In a new love,
lie has consciously met God. “This is
life eternal that they plight know Thee,
the only true God, and Jesus Christ
whom Thou has sent." The lost man
is’ lost from acquaintance with the
only absolutely reliable Friend.
Sinner Lacks Assurance.
8. The lost man is lost to the knowl¬
edge of pardon of sin.
However much he may desire and
dreamily hope that God would not
condemn him, he cannot pass beyond
the line of uncertainty about It. The
very best lie could dare say would be
based upon his self-asserted—perhaps.
But the saved man knows. As Mel
Trotter says: “1 know that Jesus
saved me for 1 was there when it hap¬
pened." The saved soul has the "of¬
fering" of Jesus Christ between him
and all guilt. He cau meet all ac¬
cusers with the challenge, “I know
whom I have believed."
Have you iieard his song? Have
you seen the light in ills eyes? Have
you gotten close enough to him to
observe that he has full assurance
of faith?
In ope of our state prisons, at chapel
service on Sunday morning, I heard
a prisoner call out, "O, I’m free, I’m
free, all my sins are pardoned. I may
have to stay in this prison twenty
years .vet, but I say I’m free." O,
soul, surely there is something worth
knowing.
4. The lost man is lost to the knowl¬
edge of answered prayer.
Now the privilege of getting things
from God is not worked out by mnn.
Prayer is a privilege presented to man
by God. He has arranged that ft can¬
not sink down to the grade of our
whims and fancies, but He has also
arranged to bring the trusting soul
up .to T.’iere “the fervent effectual
prayer of a righteous man avalleth
muchand as God answers prayer
after prayer, the Christian life becomes
a succession of miracle after miracle.
Hell-Ward or Glory-Ward?
O, it Is something to be a partner in
the secrets of “the household of faith."
The lost soul never knows that. Ai
the very best he may look off on it
with astonishment, as it has been ex¬
hibited In a godly mother or some otiier
person of faith. Or he may not do so
well; he may deny it all. Either way.
he is lost to It. To say. “I called, he
answered." is not tits. Never has there
come to him from the silence anything
but an echo.
5. The lost maif is lost to the knowl¬
edge of Christian hope.
The Christian's hope Is not an out¬
growth of interesting probabilities. No.
It is the legitimate product of security
and certainty. It means, saved today
I shall be saved forever. It opens its
eyes wide to the enemies, the dangers
and the storms, and if sees clear by
them all. It Is that better-on-before
knowledge. The tug of the place of
the "glorious reward” i« feit by the
man who has it. I tell you that the
uncertainty is drained out of the
future for such.
But the lost man! Ah, the pul! and
tog on him is from the very opposite
region. Let him be truly willing to
break with that fatal pull, and by the
grace of God lie will be caught by
the other. The one Is hell-ward, the
other is glory-ward.
Calculate, if you can. the assets oi
the man who lias God and who ha-
ope in the world. “Now the God o
pe fill you with aii joy and peaex
in believing."
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
Signature
sjag gsttB of
I ff M
M ModtUiSO* Srnrta
St? Iff * In
I B «s3S?|r Use
r^<dti^fth?refrom-inh of Slee^ rfanty | For Over
III 1 r o(
rac-Sitoile Si4n£EL
COUPS® Thirty Years
Exact Copy of Wrapper. CASTORIA
THC CZHTAUe COMPANY. NIW YOUR CITY.
Altogether Too Fussy.
Jud Tonkins says he knows a man
so particular about grammar that hell
sit and criticize the literary style of a
promissory, note instead of hustling
around and trying to pay it.
If You Need a Medicine
You Should Have ths Best
Have you ever stopped to reason why ,
it ia that so many products that are ex¬
tensively advertised, all at once drop out
of sight and are soon forgotten? The :
reason ia plain—the article did not fulfill j
the promises of the manufacturer. This
applies more particularly to a medicine.
A medicinal preparation that has real
curative value almost sells itaelf, as like
an endless chain system the remedy is
recommended by those who have been
benefited, to those who are in need of it.
A prominent druggist says “Take for j
example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a
preparation I have sold for many year*
and never hesitate to recommend, for in
almost every case it shows excellent re¬
sults, as many of my customers testify.
No other kidney remedy has so large a
sale."
According to sworn statements and
verified testimony of thousands who have
used the preparation, the success of Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is due to the fact,
so many people claim, that it fulfills al- ;
most every wish in overcoming kidney,
liver and bladder ailments; corrects uri¬
nary troubles and neutralizes the uric
acid which causes rheumatism.
You may receive a sample bottle of
Swamp-Root by Parcels Post. Address
Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.,
and enclose ten cents; also mention this
paper. • Large and medium size bottles i
for sale at all drug stores.Advertisement
Lost Lure of Titles.
"Business is not what it ought to
he," remarked the proprietor of a sea¬
shore hotel. “What’s to be done!"
“Couldn't we import a few noble-!
men and let them stay for a month, j
free of charge?" asked the publicity i
tuan.
“No. Titled foreigners were draw- !
ing cards before the war, but now they
Hre merely objects of suspicion.”—
Birmingham Age-Herald.
DYED HER DRAPERIES,
SKIRT AND A SWEATER
Each package of "Diamond Dyes" con¬
tains directions so simple that any woman
can dye or tint faded, shabby skirts,
dresses, waists, coats, sweaters, stock¬
ings, hangings, draperies, everything like
new. Buy "Diamond Dyes’—no other
kind—then perfect home dyeing is guaran
teed, even if you have never dyed before.
Tel! your druggist whether the material
you wish to dye is wool or silk, «r whether
it is linen, ootton, or mixed goods. Dia¬
mond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or
run. So easy to use.—advertisement.
Only One Right Action.
There can iro mole he two kinds of
right action than .there can be two
kinTb of straight lines.—Herbert Spen¬
cer.
Never say “Aspirin without saying Bayer
Warning! Unless you see the name Rheumatism, Earache. Toothache,
"Bayer” on package or on tablets you Lumbago and for Pain. All druggists
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre¬ sell Bayer Tablets of Aspirin in handy
scribed by physicians for twenty-one tin boxes of 12. and in bottles of 24 and
years and proved safe by millions. Take 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of
Aspirin only as told in the Bayer pack¬ Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetleacid
age-for Colds. Headache, Neuralgia. ester of Salicylicacid.
Can Do Both.
The Comedian—The leading lady is
very temperamental. On tire very
slightest provocation she makes a
scene.
Leading Man—I know site can suc¬
cessfully spoil one.*—Answers.
THIN, FADED HAIR
NEEDS "DANDERINE”
TO THICKEN IT
85 cents buys a bottle
of “Danderine." Within
ten minutes after the
first application you can
not find a single trace
of dandruff or failing
hair. Danderine is to
the hair what fresh
showers of rain ami
sunshine are to vegeta¬
tion. It goes right to
the roots, invigorates
and strengthens them.i
helping your hair and’ to*
grow long, thick
luxuriant.
Girls! Girls! Don’t let your hair
stay lifeless, colorless, thin, scraggy.
A single application of delightful Dan¬
derine will double the beauty and ra¬
diance of your hair and make it look
twice as abundant.—Advertisement.
Kansas in the Latin Quarter.
Ward Lockwood of Atchison, now
an art student in Paris, writes to the
Globe: “When one goes to the phone
here lie never knows what language
to speak. One of the French girls
who speaks several languages went
to tlie phone and sifter several minutes
finally spoke in Spanish. My friend
asked her why slie was talking in
Spanish. She replied in English that
the French central said there was a
Chinaman on the line who could only
speak Spanish besides his native
tongue.”—Atchison Globe.
Hall’s Catarrh Medicine
Those who are in a “run down” condi¬
tion will notice that Catarrh bothers them
much more than when they are in good
health. This fact proves that while Ca¬
tarrh is a local disease, it is greatly in¬
fluenced by constitutional conditions.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a
Tonic and acts through the blood upon
the, mucous surfaces of the body, thus
reducing the Inflammation and assisting
Nature in restoring normal conditions.
Alt Druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
No Option.
“f bear Charlie’s on bis feet again."
"Yes. poor boy. Ills creditors took his
ear.”
A leader of public thought attracts
attention, though a follower of It may
make more money.