Newspaper Page Text
DOES LAUNDRY
WORK AND
HOUSEWORK TOO
Surprised to Find Her¬
self Feeling So Well
Taunton, back Mass. — * ‘I used to have pains
In my and legs so badly, with other
troubles that women
sometimes have, that
my doctor ordered
me to stay in bed a
week in every month.
It didn't do me much
good, talking so one with day friend after
a
who Pinkham’s took Lydia E.
ble Compound Vegeta¬ for
about the same trou¬
bles I had, I thought
I would try it also.
I find that I can work in the laundry all
through the time and do my housework,
too. Last month I wks so surprised at
myself to be up and around and feeling
eo good while before I used to feel com¬
pletely lifeless. I have told some of the
girls troubles who work Lydia with me Pinkham’sVege- and have such
to try E.
table Compound, and I tell them how it
has helped me. You can use my testi¬
monial for the good of others.’—Mrs.
Blanche Mass. Silvia, 69 Grant St, Taunton,
It’s the same story—one friend telling
another of the value of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
Cuticura Soap
The V elvet T ouch
For the Skin
So*p 25c. Ointment 25 »m) 50c, Talcum 25c.
A Crusade.
The Old Iteformer—There are lots
•of things in this town that need at¬
tention. For instance, the young men
here spend all their spare time in
shooting craps.
The Neophyte—I don’t see how
they have the heart to shoot them. I
propose that we start a society for
the prevention of cruelty to craps.
SHE LOOKS
SO WELL
AND HAPPY
See the rich, red blood, the sign
of health, showing in her
lovely cheek?.
Some women have naturally beauti¬
ful complexions that tell you there is
plenty of richness in their blood. Their
figures become well formed, supple,
rounded, and graceful. Those are the
results of rich, red blood, and plenty
•of it. There is no need of being thin
and scrawny from poor blood. Get a
few, bottles of Gude’s Pepto-Mangan—
take it with your meals for a few
weeks. It will give you plenty ol red
blood. By building up the blood, you
give the entire system a chance to re¬
store itself naturally, and that brings
natural bloom and beauty and all the
-effects and joys of good health. Get
Gude’s Pepto-Mangan at your drug¬
gist's in liquid or tablet form. Adver¬
tisement.
Naturally Qualified.
“What makes you think your boy
Josh vvilf be a good jazz performer?”
“Because,” answered Farmer Com
tossei, "he can stand most any kind
of n noise without getting nervous.”
FOR COLDS, CROUP AND PAINS.
Use Vaeher-Balm; It relieves at once.
AVOID IMITATIONS.
If we have no agent where you live,
write for a free sample to E. W.
Vacher, Inc., New Orleans, La.—Ad¬
vertisement.
The Real Test.
“A speechmaker nowadays,” said
Uncle Eben, “ain’t satisfied wif ap¬
plause. De real test of his eloqua
■ciousness comes at de conclusion,
when he takes up a collection.”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle Of
GASTORIA. that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of (
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
A girl thinks the wisdom of Solomon
Insignificant when compared with the
smart sayings of her first beau.
To live to a ripe old age; one has to
devote a good deal of time to it.
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
Hot water
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
25$ and 754 Packages. Everywhere
NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD
DISPATCHES OF IMPORTANT HAP
PENINGS GATHERED FROM
OVER THE WORLD.
FOR THE JSY READER
The Occurrence* Of Seven Days Given
In An Epitomized Form For
Quick Reading
Foreign—
Snipers continue their grim work in
the disturbed sections of Belfast, Ire¬
land. The total of deaths so far is
eighteen, and the number of wounded
is not less than fifty.
The house of commons has voted
an expression of confidence in the poli¬
cies of Lloyd George, on every Issue,
foreign and domestic, now before the
British people.
Chinese shipping companies, lacking
government production from pirates
who have been seizing and looting
ocean-going vessels in buccaneer
taple, have taken to arming their ships
and placing details of guards aboard.
The Standard Oil company has def¬
initely suspended all work at its re¬
fineries near Tampico, and workmen
numbering upward of a thousand will
be discharged immediately, according
to advices from Tampico which say or¬
ders to this effect have been received
from New York. Only the pump work¬
ers will he retained, it was added.
The British military evacuation of
Ireland is expected to be resumed it
was declared by Michael Collins, head
of the provisional Irish government,
on his return from London, where he
interviewed, Winston Spencer Church¬
ill, secretary for colonies. General
MacReady, British military coniand
er in Ireland, visited Mr, Collins, and
their conversation, it was assumed,
was in connection with the withdrawal
of the troops. Up until recently the
troop movement had not been resum¬
ed but preparations were under way
for the immediate shipment of hun¬
dreds of tons of army stores.
The first person who can prove that
supernatural causes are not respon¬
sible for uncanny happenings at Alex
MacDonald's farm in Caledonia Mills,
near Halifax, N. S., will receive $100
if an offer made by Detective Carroll
of the provincial police and Harold
VVhidden, a Halifax reporter, holds
good.
Firing in the Stanhope street area,
when the disorders broke out anew
recently, after a lull of several hours,
became so intense that police, hurried
to the scene, were forced to use their
arms to subdue the snipers.
Protesting his innocence, the Rev,
Adelard Delorme, Catholic priest,
charged with the murder of his half
brother, Raoul, an Ottawa university
student, pleaded to be tried as soon as
| possible.
I The resignation of Czechoslovakia
! as “guardian’’ of Austria is declared
in diplomatic circles for discussion be
! tween Dr. Eduard Benes, the Czecho
j premier, and foreign minister and the
! British government during the visit
in London of Dr. Benes.
The permanent court of internation
| al justice was opened recently at The
j Hague eral of with the royal fitting families ceremonies. in Sev¬
were at¬
tendance.
Washington—
Decrease of more than 200,000 tons
j in the world’s production of coal in
| 1921 compared with the output in 1920,
| was noted in a recent statement on
mining activities issued by the geo¬
logical survey.
Confidence that the work of the rail¬
road administration will be “substan
i tially completed” by January 1, 1924,
and that the “entire liquidation of the
obligations of the government arising
during the period of federal control
I could be concluded without any addi
j tional appropriation ,for that purpose
by congress" was expressed in a letter
from President Harding to Speaker
| Gillett recently.
The Kenyon bill to aid idle men
of the country has been recommitted,
and it is believed that the return of
the measure to the committee means
j its “death.”
Despite the pressure of both Repub¬
lican and Democratic senate leaders
for prompt action, controveries are de¬
veloping within the foreign relations
| committee which may lead to a long
discussion of the arms conference
treaties before any of them is brought
to the senate floor for ratification.
Secretary Denby, in asking congress
for an appropriation of $350,000,000
for the navy next year, in a frank and
detailed statement as to what the navy
department hoped to accomplish, told
: the house naval committee that his
estimate called for a reduction of 10,
900 in enlisted personnel, which was
made possible only by putting about
100 destroyers out of commission and
oy sharp cuts in shore station forces.
The war department has ordered ft
i further reduction of officers and men
in the American forces in Germany,
i There remains a total of 169 officers
| ind 2,217 men.
! Proposals were made before the in
| terstate commerce commission at the
I hearing by S. Davie Warfield, presi
j I dent of the National Association of
Owners of Railroad Securities, prelim
| inary to a report engineering by the board of eco¬
nomics and appointed by
the association advocating methods
for the economical handling of rail¬
road equipment.
THE CLEVELAND
A demand for an immediate Investi¬
gation of reports that the "fertilizer
industry” is maintaining an expensive
lobby not to defeat Henry Ford’s of¬
fer for tile Muscle Shoals nitrate proj¬
ect was made in the senate by Senator
McKeilar, Tennessee.
Congress was torn recently bettveen
passing a sales tax to pay a soldier
bonus and dropping altogether the
cash bonus, stipulating therefor paid
up insurance or land grants. This was
the situation-in the wake of President
Harding's letter suggesting the sales
tax for abandonment as the alterna¬
tives for the bonus.
Traffic over the Pennsylvania lines
between here and Baltimore had been
resumed recently after several hours’ (
interruption caused by the derailment
at Odenton, Md., of tw r o cars on the
Buffalo express. Four persons were
injured, two seriously, and several hun¬
dred yards of track were torn up in
the derailment, necessitating the rout¬
ing of Pennsylvania trains over the
Baltimore and Ohio tracks until the
damage was repaired.
Domestic—
Sidney Krengel of Krengel Broth¬
ers, St.. Louis diamond importers of
New York and Chicago, reported to
the St. Louis poliice that he had been
robbed of between $125,000 and $150,
000 worth of diamonds on an Illinois
Central train arriving in that city
from Chicago one morning recently.
Renewal of the demand of the
union coal miners for a six-hour day,
five day week, a proposal that was
made before the 1919 strike, has been
adopted By the convention in session
at Indianapolis, Ind., of the United
Mine Workers of America as a part
of the policy of the union for the
coming year,
Chicago churches are making spe¬
cial plans to care for the spiritual
welfare of church members addicted to
playing golf on Sunday mornings. It
is planned to install wireless receiv¬
ing stations as soon as the links are
opening in the spring, and members
may “enjoy” a sermon while smoking
a cigarette on the verandah.
Senator Robert M. La Follette, who
delivered an address at Milwaukee at
a meeting commemorating the revo¬
lutionary hero, Frederick von Stuben,
said that the “twin pillars” of the
American nation—freedom and inde¬
pendence—are being battered down by
the “vandals of privilege and mon¬
opoly.’’
The 16-year-old daughter, Mathiide,
of Harold F. McCormick will marry
in the near future Max Oser, 48 years
old, proprietor of a Berne, Switzerland
riding academy. She says she loves
him, and her family has agreed to let
her marry him.
District Attorney Banton of New
York says that he believes that not 10
per cent'of the fraud victims of bucket
shops have reported their losses, not¬
withstanding the docket is crowded so
that it will take months to clear it.
Chicago will have an auto hotel, 25
stories high, which is expected to re¬
lieve the congested traffic of that city.
New York, it is stated, will follow suit.
At a meeting at-Birmingham, Ala.,
presided over by former Governor
Emmet ON’eal, the Alabama Power
company, bidder for Muscle Shoals,
was. denounced by speakers and the
name of Henry Ford, who has also
made a proposal to the government
for the properties, repeatedly cheered.
The meeting was held in a theater,
the crowd being so large that several
hundred persons were unable to find
seats.
The state supreme court of New
York has granted permission for a
commission to take testimony at Mon¬
treal, Canada, In the divorce suit oi
James A. Stillman against his wife.
Two men, both said to be residents
of Memphis, Tenn., are detained by
the police pending investigation of an
alleged attempt to force a will pur¬
porting to have been signed by Mary
Ann Easton, disposing of an estate
in Brooklyn, N. Y., valued at half a
million dollars.
Fire at Dothan, Ala., destroyed the
plant of the Dothan Syrup company,
causing an estimated loss of $75,000,
covered by insurance.
George A. Bowen, attorney, shot and
killed his wife, Mary Boden, 37 years
of age, and her mother, Mrs. Julia Tay¬
lor, 66, and then ended his life in
his wife’s home at Los Angeles, Cal.
Detectives investigating the slaying
of William Desmond Taylor, motion
picture director, continued interview¬
ing persons thought to have informa¬
tion possibly bearing on the case,
but without definite results, District
Woolwine announced at Los Angeles,
Cal.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., addressing
the Westchester County Chamber of
Commerce at New York, told another
story on himself about his rei— M visit
to China. In one town he visitt' he
caused removal of the top of the se«
in which he was being carried to that
he might better see the sights. The
populace greeted him in such a pecu¬
liar manner that he made inquiries,
eliciting the information that he was
riding in state only accorded to crim¬
inals on their way to be executed.
Positive identification of the muti¬
lated and charred remains of a woman
found In a ravine at Hazlehurst, Miss.,
recently, as that of Mrs. Ada Drury
j 1 Converse, formerly Texas, but of Wichita recently Falls,
and Warsaw, more
1 of Selma, Ala., was made by her 20
I year old son.
The gTand jury recently returned
four true bills against Mrs. Catherine
Rosier in connection with the killing
of her husband, Oscar Rosier, and his
19 -year-old stenographer, Mildred Rick
ett in bis advertising offices at Phil
) adelphia, Pa.
CALOMEL IS A
DANGEROUS DRUG
Next Dose May Salivate You,
Loosen Teeth or Start
Rheumatism.
Calomel ts mercury ; quicksilver. It
crashes into sour bile like dynamite,
cramping and sickening you. Calomel
attacks the bones and should never be
put Into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, consti¬
pated and all knocked out, just go to
your druggist and get a bottle of Dod¬
son’s Liver Tone for a few cents which
Is a harmless vegetable substitute for
dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful
and if it doesn’t start your liver acd
Straighten you up better and quicker
than nasty calomel and without making
you sick, you just go back and get your
money.
Don’t take calomel! It makes you
sk-k the next day; it loses you a day’s
work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens
you right up and you feel great. No
salts necessary. Give it to the children
because it is perfectly harmless and
can not salivate.—Advertisement.
Post Office Gallantry.
Pretty Girl—Any letters for hue?
Young Clerk—No, miss.
Pretty Girl—I am surprised.
Young Clerk (gallantly)—-go am II
ASPIRIN INTRODUCED
BY “BAYER" IN 1900
Look for Name “Bayer” on the Tab.
lets, Then You Need
Never Worry.
If you want the true, world-famous
Aspirin, as prescribed by physicians
for over twenty-one years, you must
ask for “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.”
The name “Bayer” is stamped on
each tablet and appenrs on each pack¬
age for your protection against imita¬
tions.—Advertisement.
SHOULD BE FINISH TO THIS
Probably Some Readers Would Like to
Know Just What the Lieutenant
Colonel Said.
Private Washington Lee Johnson had
just come up with the replacements
and, not never having had no luck
a-tali, went on sentry duty the first
night in tlie new camp. In the wee,
sma’ hours along blew the lieutenant
colonel who had a reputation for be¬
ing one hard-boiled guy.
“Halt! Who goes dar?” bellowed Pri¬
vate Johnson. '
| “Officer of the post.”
There was a long and painful silence
while the sentry racked his brain
for the proper tiling to say. Then the
officer snarled:
“Well, why don’t you say some¬
thing? Are you going to leave me
standing here like this all night?”
“Nossuh,” answered Private John¬
son in relief as a flash of Inspiration
j came. "No, indeedy, sub. At ease!"
•American Legion Weekly.
Details Desired.
“He pressed his cheek to hers. The
color left her cheek.”
“You mean he rubbed it off?"
True, Perhaps.
Nathaniel—“What doe.s ‘collegebred’
mean, dad?” Father—“Merely a big
loaf, Nathaniel."
Artificial.
“Her cheeks are like roses." "Aren’t
you laying it on pretty thick?” "No;
but she is.”
Notoriety pays as well as fame, but
fame goes on after death.
Sawe the bird in hand —
The others may be hard to catch
With enough money, enough time organs with elements of destruction,
and enough luck, a man may get back or starve the tissues and glands of
the health he has lost—or part of it. needed elements.
It takes patience, too. Grape-Nuts is a delicious cereal food
And then there be which has the qualities of scientific
may no success, nutrition. It supplies the full richness
or only a little. of those splendid food grains, wheat and
It’s better to save what you have malted barley, together with the vital
than bunt for what you’ve lost—as mineral elements, so often lacking from
the most successful health-restorers foods. Served with cream or good milk,
will tell you. Grape-Nuts gives full nourishment
Much of the loss of health is due to without over-loading the stomach.
faulty, careless diet. Wrong meals at A splendid thought for breakfast
all times and right meals at wrong or lunch, for those who would keep
times load the long-suffering digestive health —
Grape Nuts—the Body Builder
“There’s a Reason”
Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Michigan
“Good
to the
Last
Drop’
MAXWELL HOUSE
lilsvi/HaxwcMOioiisc'J^a COFFEE
y
, CHEEK NEAL COFFEE CO.
■ . NAbuviuf Houston JACh.Rrvyifjt RitHMONp’Nt^wdRK •
Hamlet*, purely vegetable, Infants* j
Children’* Regulator, formula on every label.
Guaranteed non-narcotic, non-alcoholic.
MRS. WINSLOWS SYRUP
The infanta’ and Children'* Regulator
Children grow healthy and free 1
from colic, diarrhoea, flatulency,
constipation and other trouble if |
given It at teething time. |
Safe, pleasant—always brings re¬
markable and gratifying reaulta. j
At DruggUt*f au A/vii
' j/
ft
ED. HOWE’S FAVORITE STORY
Well-Known Kansas Editor Takes
Pride in Effectual Way He
Squelcned Bore.
E. W. Howe of Kansas 1ms been
something of n traveler. He made a
number of trips abroad and went
twice around the world. It was on
his first trip abroad that lie encoun¬
tered one of the sea hounds whose
chief boast is concerned in the num¬
ber of times they have crossed the At¬
lantic. Mr. Howe tells the Incident as
his favorite story.
“Is this your first trip ” the sea
hound asked Mr. Howe on the occa¬
sion of their first meeting. Mr. Howe
admitted that It was. “Well," said
the sea hound, “I’ve crossed the Atlan¬
tic 40 times.” On the second day the
sea hound again put the question to
Mr. Howe and again vouchsafed the
same observation. He repeated it at
frequent intervals during the trip.
It was on the sixth day, after (lie
sen hound had again spoken of the
number of his crossings, that Mr.
Howe said to him: "By the way, have
you ever been to Omaha?” The sea
hound said lie never had. “Well,” re¬
torted Mr. Howe, “I go there every
week."—Philadelphia Public Ledger.
A Musical Critic.
“A mean critic, forsooth,”
“Eh?”
“He raps your rhapsody."
A man is usually embarrassed when
he proposes marriage to a woman—
either financially or otherwise.
The girl who sings Incessantly
either has a sweet disposition or a
grudge against the neighbors.
The first thing a man does after
making a fool of himself is to try to
explain how it happened.
COLLECT YOUR RAD ACCOUNTS. Use our
collection ion letters letters that collect. Complete
ries, SERVICE, postpaid, Arcade for two dollars. COLLECTION
Bldg., ROME, N. V.
Agents: Chart. Demonstrate Delisles Self-diagnostlo
Remarkable restorative movements.
No more big doctor bills. Treat yourself.
Write Rad Publisher, Box 364, San Diego,Cal.
For Sale- —DO Day Runner Velvet Beans $1.10 .lOj j
Bunch and Osceola • las $1.25,; f. o. b. her ash
with order. C.P.Daniel's Sons,Waynesboro, Ga.
DROPSY TREATED ONE
WEEK FREE
Short breathing re^
litwed in a few hours;
few liver, swelling reduced in a
days; regulates the kidneys, stomach
and heart; purifies the blood, strengthens the
entire system. Write for Free Trial Treatment.
COLLUM OBOPST REMEDY CO., Dept. E. 0., ATLANTA, GA.
DIVULGED SECRET OF PAPA’S
Small Daughter of Story Writer Quite
Unwilling to Make Exhibition of
Family Skeleton.
A little girl, whose father is widely
known as a writer of humorous stories,
was said: recently approached by a visitor,
who
“It must be nice to lmve a papa who
knows so many fine stories."
The little girl blushed and hung her
head.
“Aren’t you proud of your papa?”
the visitor asked.
“Yes,” the little girl answered, “but
I think I ought to tell you something.”
“What is it?”
“The stories by my papa aren’t
stories at all.”
“Not stories?”
“No.”
And in a deep, hoarse whisper, the
child confessed:
“He makes them all up out of his
own head.”
These Post-War Days.
Representative Frear of Wisconsin
said at a dinner at Milwaukee:
“There lias been a lot of talk to
the contrary, but nevertheless the cost
of all kinds c-f wearing apparel keeps
unreasonably high.
“A rich Milwaukee banker sat at
luncheon the other day when a ser¬
vant entered and said:
“ ‘There's a second-hand-clothes man
at the back door, sir.’
“ ‘Good!’ said the rich banker. ‘Ask
him if he can let me have a second¬
hand pair of shoes at a reasonable
price.’ ’’
Nor is die world getting better when
there are fewer “beg pardons.”
Personal opinion is a mighty club
when it is also public opinion.