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IT SAVED MY LIFE”
Th» Feeling Tribute of a Woman fa
PE-RU-NA
READ HER LETTER— IT WILL DO YOU GOOD
"Pe-ra-na haa been & Godsend to me. I feel safe
In saying that It saved my life. I wa« all run down
ar.d miserable when I commenced taking Pe-ru-na,
but am on the road to recovery now. I cannot thank
ycu too much.”
MRS. CHARLES ANSPAUGH,
R. F. ©. No. 1, Lagrange, Indiana.
A letter like this tarings hope and the promise
of health to every sick and suffering woman. Per¬
haps you know what It means to have your daily
duties a misery, every movement an effort, stomach
of deranged, the pains in the head, back and loins most
time, nerves raw and quivering—not a mo¬
TABLETS OR LIQUID ment day or night free from suffering.
SOLD EVERYWHERE Do as Mrs. Anspaugh did. 2*Jce Pe-ru-na. Don’t
wait but start right away. v,
Repairing China.
By applying n little carriage var¬
nish carefully with a camel’s hair
brush to the edges of broken china, the
parts being neatly joined together, the
fracture will, when thoroughly dry, be
hardly perceptible, and the china will
«tand tiro and water.
Some Are Just Spoiled.
“Men,” mused Mrs. Meeklns, “men
are just like eggs—they’re fresh, rot¬
ten and hard-boiled." — Richmond
Tlmes-Dlspatch.
CORNS
Lift Off with Fingers
"Freezone” on nn aching corn, Instant¬
ly that corn stops hurting, then short¬
ly you lift It right off with Ungers.
IVuly!
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
-Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, soft corn,
or corn between the toes, and the cal¬
luses, without soreness or Irritation.
GREEN MOUNTAIN
ASTHMA
COMPOUND
quickly ing relieves the distress¬
paroxysms. Used for
65 years and result of long
experience in treatment of
throat and lung diseases by
Dr. J. H. Guild. FREE TRIAL j
BOX, Treatise on Asthma, its
causes, treatment, etc., sent |
upon request. 2fte. and fl.00 !
*t druggists. J. H. GUILD GO., RUPERT, VT.
A Grateful
Mother writes:
Galveston, U, Texas,
March 1920.
preparation. I know there i» nothing that to Mrs- Winslow’s
can come up
Syrup for a baby and I feel that it was a God baby. sent blessing to me.
tell With any mother what It has done for my
all good wishes to you and your preparation. Respectfully.
(A wpectl______
owe on rmtuesi)
Diarrhoea, colic, flatulency and teething
troubles are relieved by this safe, pleasant
preparation. Non-narcotic, non-alcoholic.
MRS. WINSLOWS SYRUP
Tht Infants’ and Children ’a Regulator
Open formula on every labeL At All Druggists.
ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO.. 216-217 Fulton Street, New York
General Selling Agents :
Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc., Hew York, Toronto, London, Sydney
STONECYPHER’S IRISH
POTATO BUG KILLER®
Every year you plant Irish Potatoes.
Every year you have Potato Bugs.
Every year you should use
STONECYPHER’S
Irish Potato Bug Killer
Guaranteed to destroy the bug without damage to the plant
Also destroys all leaf eating Insects on cabbage, cucumber,
cantaloupe, squash and tomato vines. Ap¬
ply lightly. Lost low. Applicaton easy.
Results sure.
For Sale by Drug. Seed
and General Stores |
STONECYPFTER DREG & |
CHEMICAL CO. |
Westminster, - - - 8. C. j
I
I
;
HEWS BRIEFLY TOLD
DISPATCHES 0= IMPORTANT HAP.
PENINGS GATHERED FROM
OVER THE WORLD.
FOR THE JUSY READER
The Occurrences Of Sevca Days Given
In An Epitomized Form For
Quick Reading
Foreign—
Mall from Paris will reach New York
within fifteen hours when the ‘‘phan¬
tom airplane,” invented by Capt. Mau¬
rice Percheron, has been perfected, Par¬
is papers say. This is a question now
of only a couple of years, it is asserted.
The north to northwesterly gales pre¬
vailing in Paris brought disaster to sev¬
eral of the twenty spherical balloons
entered for the Grand Prix of the Aero
Club of France.
The Spanish nation is finding ex¬
treme difficulty in obtaining elemen¬
tary school teachers, of whom a further
28,000 are required, in order to pro¬
vide the millions of illiterate children
with education. The reason for the
shortage is small salaries.
The French are marching deeper in¬
to Germany. According to word re¬
ceived in Berlin, French soldiers have
advanced one kilometer in the vicinity
of Karlsruhe in order to increase the
hold on the railroads of the Ruhr.
Paris newspapers opine: France
holds the whip over Germany; Brit¬
ain and Italy are in no position to
force the French to relinquish their
hold on the German industrial area;
France does not intend to stay perma¬
nently in the Ruhr.
A bill to provide that any ship en¬
tering British waters or leaving a Brit¬
ish port be obliged to carry a reason¬
able amount of alcoholic liquors for the
supply of passengers on demand is to
be introduced in the British house of
commons by Lieut. Col. George Loyd
Courtbope, Conservative member for
the Rye division of Sussex.
An emphatic note from the British
government handed to Maxi Litvinoft,
assistant Russian foreign minister, al¬
leging propaganda and other tiolation
of the Anglo-Russian trade agreement
and demanding assurances of uncondi¬
tional fulfillment of specified require¬
ments within ten days, is considered
by Russian officials as definitely in¬
tended to bring about a break in Anglo
Itussian relations.
Dr. Iirupp von Bohlen, head of the
Krupp works, was sentenced to 15
years in jail and to pay a fine of one
hundred million marks as a result of
tho» trial by eourtinarttal here gr#*4ng
out of the shooting at the Krupp plant
on March 31. Directors Hartwig and
Oesterlen also were sentenced to 13
years imprisonment each, Director
Bruhn to ten years and Baur and
Schaeffer to twenty years each. All
were also sentenced to pay fines of one
hundred million darks each.
The executive of the British parlia¬
mentary labor party sent a telegram
to the Russian soviet government, al¬
luding to the dispatch of the British
warship Harebell to the Murman coast
and begging the soviet to refrain from
any action tending to precipitate a
resort to force pending further nego¬
tiations on the British ultimatum.
M. Vorovsky, head of the Russian
soviet delegation at the Lausanne
peace conference, was assassinated.
He was shot several times and killed
outright. M. Ahrens, head of the
soviet press bureau in Laucanne, and
soviet press bureau in Lausanne, and
were wounded, the former seriously.
The appeal of Alexander Howat, de¬
posed president of the Kansas district
United Mine Workers of America from
an immigration decision barring him
from Canada on the ground that he
might become a public charge, has been
denied by the Canadian department of
immigration.
Washington
A fraud order was Issued by Post¬
master General New against the Pil¬
grim Oil company and several individ¬
uals at Wort Worth, Texas.
Complete returns of earning of class
one railroads for March filed with the
interstate commerce commission and
compiled by the* Association of Rail¬
way Executives showed a total net
income of $S3,56S,000. This amount,
the association estimated, represent¬
ed an annual return rate of 5.85 per
cent on the value of railroad property.
During March, 1922, the same carriers
earned $S3,4S7,000.
Department of justice officials man¬
ifest no disappointment over the ad¬
verse turn taken at the outset in the
government's sugar suit. Experts de¬
clare the principle involved is whether
the law now gives the government a
remedy to protect the public against
“gambling” in the vital necessities of
life.
Sevral problems will face American
and Mexican negotiations when they sit
down at the conference table at Mex
ico City to seek an agreement that will
again cement relations between the two
republics.
Commenting on municipal election
in Baltimore, the Democratic national
committee declared in a statement
that “the overwhelming” Democratic
victory not only redeems that city
from Republican rule, but gives full
assurance that the state of Maryland
is safely in the Democratic column
for 1924.
Jerusalem's Tragic History.
Jerusalem has been besieged, razed
and destroyed more times than any
city in history'. It was taken by Davie
about 1048 B. C.; by Egyptians, 850;
by Sennacherib, 710; by Nebuchad¬
nezzar 588; by Ptolemy Soter, 320;
by Antloehus, 170; by Pompey, 03; by
Crassus, 54; by Herod, 57; by Titus,
70 A. D.; by Chosroes, 014; by Hera¬
cles, 028; by Saracens, 037; by Crusad¬
ers, 1090; by Saladln, 1187; by Crusad¬
ers, 1243; by Saracens, 1391; by the
Turks, 1510. General AUenby took 11
In the World war.
CALOMEL IS A
DANGEROUS DRUG
Next Dose May Salivate You,
Loosen Teeth or Start
Rheumatism.
Calomel Is 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
soh’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 and
straighten you up better and quicker
than nasty calomel and without mak¬
ing you sick, juat go back and get
your money.
Don’t take calomel! It makes you
sick the next dny; it loses you a day’s
work. Dodson’s Liver Tone straightens
you right up aud you feel great. No
salts necessary. Give It to the children
because It is perfectly harmless and
con not salivate.—Advertisement.
Observant Daddy.
“There’s only one good thing about
that young puppy that came to see you
last night,” said the angry father,
“and that Is he’s healthy.”
“I’m surprised to hear you admit
that much,” replied the dutiful daugh¬
ter.
“I wouldn’t except for the fact that
when you met him in the hall I heard
you say: “Oh, George, how cold your
nose Is!”
CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA
Three sets of plans for settling the
country’s transportation problem will
battle oevr railroads which may dwarf
be urged on the nation in a political
all other issues in the 1924 campaign.
President Harding and his administra¬
tion have one plan—a fairly definite
program, based upon consolidation of
existing lines into a score of great sys¬
tems.
Washington, it now seems, is about
to have a national opera house. Ed¬
ouard Albion’s musical dream seems a
reality—that of a great American op¬
era company with a home in the na¬
tion’s capital where American music
by American singers may be rendered.
An appeal to the Supreme court in the
“shortest possible time,” Attorney Gen¬
eral announces, will be taken by the
government from the New York deci¬
sion denying an injunction to prevent
speculation on the New' York sugar
market.
Negro doctors, as far as possible,
will be employed in the minor medical
positions at the veterans’ bureau hos¬
pital at Tuskegee, Ala., but the chief
medical officer will at least for the
present, be a white man, it was learn¬
ed at the veterans’ bureau. This pol¬
icy has been decided on, it was ex¬
plained, to give the negro patients the
same treatment that other benefic¬
iaries of the bureau are receiving at
other institutions.
Final announcement was made at
the treasury department by Assistant
Secretary' Moss that the department
would adhere to its former ruling that
a duty of 25 per cent ad valorem would
be imposed on calcium arsenate,
which the agricultural department has
recommended to cotton planters for
use in their fight to exterminate the
boll weevil.
Domestic
The Democratic party has been saved
from extinction in Wisconsin by Rich¬
ard Kanake, assemblyman from Merrill,
Wis., and has saved the party for fu¬
ture elections.
The business of life, at least that
portion of it having to do with the man¬
ufacture, sale and use of material
things, has become eo complicated in
recent years that more than 200 na¬
tional industrial associations and gov¬
ernment departments are now engaged
in a co-operative effort to straighten
out the tangle. The straightening pro¬
cess has taken the form of simplifica¬
tion, unification, and standardization
of raw materials, of manufacturing
processes and of finished products.
Remains of two men found on Cuya
maca mountains, near San Diego, Cali¬
fornia, near the engine and fragments
of an airplane, were positively identi¬
fied as those of Col. Francis H. Mar¬
shall and Lieut. Charles Webber, whose
fate has been a mystery since they left
San Dipgo December 7 on a flight to
Tuczon, Ariz.
The introduction of modem fanning
methods and implements into South
Aflrica has proven that South Afri¬
cans are very rough with farm tools,
and that, strong stuff is needed.
Miss Lulu Shaw, woman mayor of
Gnuidon, Wis., has started a campaign,
on the liquor enforcement law. She
recently conducted an anti-silk stocking
campaign.
The embryo town of Longview, Wash¬
ington, will celebrate its first birthday
this summer, preparing for a popula¬
tion of 20,000 inhabitants by 1928, This
town w r as established by the Long-Bell
•Lumber company in connection with
the development of Umber areas of the
Northwest.
Holding twenty employees of the Os
termoor & Co., mattress manufactur¬
ers, at bay, at New York, three armed
bandits robbed the treasurer of $1,500
and escaped in an automobile, passing
police headquarters in their flight.
Fifty students and guests of the junior
prom of Rose Polytechnic institution are
under medical treatment, due, physi¬
cians believe, to drinking poisoned
punch.
Advance in prices, of which we are
just now hearing so much, is by no
means confined to the United States.
The fact is, say New York newspapers,
price advances in all parts of the world
are in nearly as large proportion as in
the United States.
Prediction of a new era in which the
souUiern states would lead the coun¬
try in humanitarian treatment of pris¬
oners, was made by Dr. Hastings A.
Hart, a member of the Russel Sage
| foundation American and prison former commission, president in of the
| ! an
nouneing that he might accept an in
; vitation of legislative committees in
i North and South Carolina to investi
| gate prison government’s conditions application in those states. for
The a
| temporary injunction to enjoin trad
S ing in raw sugar futures by the New
; York coffee and sugar exchangee and
j its clearing association was denied by
! i the United States circuit court of ap
peals at New York before which the
• case was heard. The court announced
j that a memorandum stating its reason
; might be filed later. The United States
j attorney had charged before the court
j that prices were manipulated on these
j I exchanges, and asked the court to in
te^pret such practice as gambling.
A “tempest in a tea pot,” is the way
Mrs. Florence Avery Barragrant re¬
ferred to the fttrore her marriage a
week ago to Francis Barrigrand, ex¬
gardener to her millionaire father,
created in Detroit’s most exclusive see
cial circle.
A Chicago grand jury has begun an
investigation of the mystery surround
jing | the death of Leighton Mount, a
Northwestern university student, who
disappeared following a clash rush in
September, 1921, and whose skeleton
was found under a pier at Evanston a
week ago.
STATE ITEMS
CONDENSED
Macon.—In recognition of “excellent
service that has been rendered the
general public by the local postoffice
and the steady growth in revenues
from the office,” the postoffice d&
partment has raised the Macon post
office to first class and increased the
salary of the postmaster to $4,200,
The present salary is *3,750.
Savannah.—On account of lack cn
i funds available, the schools of Savan
; nah will close two weeks earlier than
j schedule, the term to end, according to
a decision of the education board,
; Jul >e 8, instead of June 22. A saving
j is thus effected, it is announced, of i
| $18,000. A recent election on the |
defeated. question of additional school tax war I
Atlanta.—Asking Governor Hard¬
wick to Institute an investigation, a
letter has been received at the office
of the governor, from J. G. Barrett,
at the Folsom prison. Repressa, Cal.,
stating that a detainer has been filed
for him at the prison by the Georgia
authorities. Barrett denies that he
has ever been in Georgia and asserts
that there is some mistake as he
could not be wanted in this state on
any charge.
Savannah.—John H. Hamilton has
been appointed chief deputy collector
of customs at Savannah. He succeeds
George I, Morris, who retires because
of ill health. Mr. Hamilton has been
in the service several years, starting
in a modest capacity, Mr. Morris is
an expert in his line. He came here
several years ago to reorganize the
forces under a revision of the rules
and an extension of the territory of
the Savannah office.
Valdosta.—City council has decided
to turn the Georgia-Florida fair
grounds property back to the six men
who bought the property at a trus¬
tees’ sale some months ago, and from
whom the city agreed to purchase.
This action was taken after the coun¬
cil was advised legally that the court
would rule against the trade. The city
bought the fair grounds about three
months ago, paying $5,000 down and
giving notes for the balance.
Griffin.—A fire broke out In ths
Kincaid Mill No. 1 recently. It start¬
ed in, and was confined to the Jac¬
quard weave room, where a workman
was repairing a “jack” over one of
the looms with a suspended electric
light The light fell, causing the wire
to break when it struck the loom,
igniting (he material over the loom
immediately, the fire spreading all
over the room before the automatic
sprinklers were set in operation.
Macon.—George Coffin and C. H.
Brethauer, who claim Indianapolis,
Ind., as their home, and who were ar.
rested near Barnesville several months
, ago. having in their possession 600
j quarts of high-grade whisky, entered
j I trict please court of guilty and in United each States dis
were fined $500
by Federal Judge William H. Barrett.
The two high-grade automobiles in
which the whisky was found, were con¬
fiscated by order of Judge Barrett.
Stillmore.—Sherman Warren, Jr.,
was struck on the head by a pitched
ball during a game between Vidalia
and Stilimore, resulting in his death
He retired from the game and seemed
to be injured only slightly. After the
game he left for home, two miles
away, riding his pony. Upon arrival
he turned the horse in the lot and
started toward the house, but became
nauseated before entering the yard.
He soon lapsed into unconsciousness,
remaining so until death came.
Griffin.—The city commissioners de¬
voted most of their time recently to
a discussion of the Greater Griffin
project, maps for which have been
j ' completed. large copies The be city distributed manager has 500
to among
the people. Hon. L. P. Goodrich, city
attorney, has drawn up a bill to be
presented for the approval of the leg
islature in June, the bill to be pro
sented by A. K. Maddox, representa
tire. If passed by the legislature the
extension will be voted on by all qual
Tied voters.
Atlanta.—Resolutions setting forth
reasons for limiting tonnage and speed
of heavily laden motor trucks on paved
| thoroughfares of Atlanta and sugges
j I tions loadings for maximum capacity for truck
and speed, were adopted by
j the of Civil Atlanta Engineers chapter, American Society
| and issued for pub
j iication. Resolutions were drawn by
1 a special committee consisting of W.
j C. Spiker, S. B. Black and W. J. Lack
| ley, ommendations which, in addition to devision rec
j speed governing loading and
j of trucks, recommended a sys
j tern lowest to enable the public to obtain the
I and most economic costs of
j highway transportation.
j Cedartown.—Harris Dingier, a young
j I white man. living near here, was dan
gerously hurt here recently whan a
j j sedan taxicab struck his wagon. The
acident occurred on Benedict’s bridge,
i two miles south of town. Mr. Ding
| Ier’s hip was knocked out of
| and fractured, an ear torn off
j possible internal injuries. Three men
in the taxi were not hurt. According
to accounts of the accident, the wagon
was on the bridge, and the car coming
from behind at high speed, struck the
coupling pole as the wagon turneA
WOMAN’SHEALTH
RESTORED
She Claims Lydia £. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound Did It After
Everything Else Failed
fought Milwaukee, Wisconsin.— “ I feel that
to let yo*i_-»now about my case. I
was ailing arid could
barely work do my house¬
and washing I
was just from so having run-down,
one
child. I took a lot of
medicines and had
doctors. Then I gave
them all up and took
Lydia Vegetable E. Pinkham’s
Com¬
pound wonderfully and I feel
I do good
now. every¬
thing medicine that comes along, tonic and we all take
your as a when we don’t
feel iust so. I am thankful for what
the Vegetable Compound has done for
my health and for my family.”—Mrs.
Maky Saiecheck, 944 28th Street, Mil¬
waukee, Wisconsin.
Letters like these testify to the value
of the Vegetable Compound. These
women hearts. speak They from the fullness of their
describe as correctly as
they can their affected conditions; First, those
symptoms that them most con¬
of spicuously; those symptoms.They and later the disappearance sincere
are ex¬
pressions Lydia of gratitude. For nearly fifty
years E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has been so praised by women.
TOO
LATE
Death only a matter of short time.
Don’t wait until pains and aches
become incurable diseases. Avoid
painful consequences by taking
LATHROP’S
The world’s standard remedy for kidney;
liver, bladder and uric acid troubles—the
National Remedyof Holland since 1696.
Guaranteed. Three sizes, all druggists.
Look for the name Cold Medal on every
bo* and accept no imitation
Cuticura Talcum
' Fascinatingly Fragrant 11
Always Healthful
Soap ZSc, Ointment 25 tad 50c, Telaan 25c.
The Old Man Capitulates.
“Did you make a hit with the girl’s
dad?” a ski'd a youthful sw'ain of Clab
board Springs.
“You’re doggone whistling!” replied
another of his ilk. “Why, he not only
gimme the girl, but talked about swap¬
ping me one of His dogs for a gun, a
wagon, a broadax and a few other
tilings like that.”—Kansas City Star.
Could See Big
Change in Baby
From the First
“I could see a big change for the
better in baby right from the first
when I began giving him Teethina;
he grew quieter, his stomach pains
left off and now he is as fat and
healthy a child as you please,” writes
Mrs. Maude Neighbors, 163S W. 4th
St., Texarkana, Texas.
When baby is restless and fretful
from teething or a disordered stom¬
ach nothing will bring such quick re¬
lief as Teethina, It contains nothing
that can harm the most delicate child,
but soothes and allays distress inci¬
dent to teething and colicky condi¬
tions.
Teethina is sold by leading drug¬
gists or send 30c to the Moffett Lab¬
oratories, Columbus, Ga., and receive
a full size package and a free copy
of Moffett’s Illustrated Baby Book.—
(Advertisement.)
1 Easy.
Easy—“How did you keep your con¬
tribution secret?” -“I sent in an
J anonymous check.”
!
j
j
j j
| !
j ! A sure, safe end
> I way to
CORNS of
; In one minute you can end the pain
! corns with Dr. Scholl s Zino-pads. They
remove the cause — friction -pressure.
You risk no infection from cutting, no
1 danger from corrosive acids.
Zino-pads protect while they heal.
j Thin: antiseptic; waterproof. Sizes for
corns, callouses, bunions. Get a noi
i today at your druggist sor shoe dealer 3«
Xfino-pads Scholls
Uadi in the Uhoretcru: of Tke Scholl
Ufg Co., makers of Dr. SckoiTs Foot
Comfort Af flimmcts . Arch Supports, ftc.
Put one on-thepain is gone!