Newspaper Page Text
Lift Off-No Pain!
Doesn’t hurt one bit! Drop a little
“Freezone” on an aching corn, instant¬
ly that corn stops hurting, then short¬
ly you lift it right off with fingers.
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to
remove every hard corn, soft corn, or
eorn between the toes, and the foot
calluses, without soreness or irritation.
I
WORMS RUIN
A CHILD’S HEALTH
Drive every worm out of
your child’s system without a
moment’s delay. Use the safe,
vegetable worm medicine that
has been so successful for 75
years—Frey’s Vermifuge.
Perhaps you don’t know your child
has worms. Gritting the teeth, pick¬
ing the nostrils, disordered Frey’s stomach
are symptoms. Buy Vermifuge
at your druggist’s today.
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms
T
Chips off the Old Bloch,
m JUNIORS
Littlo ffls
One-third the regu¬ of
lar dose. Made
same ingredients,
then candy coated.
I For children and adults. M
ISOLD BY YOUR DRUGGIST*
ooK'r m mM
surely Darken year safely gray hair, gradually, of
and In privacy
your home. Used over 80 years by
f. f A > millions. Money-back guarantee.
, BOOKLET FllEB.
Gfban Hair Kslf Color sF
" *
At At your vour Drutpfist Druddist 75 75"
MESSta-ElUS. CHEMISTS. Dept. W, MEMPHIS, TENN.
WHAT CAUSES BOILS.
Boils and carbuncles are the result of !m
f*oper diet or infection of the skin. It’s some¬
times hard to determine the exact cause but
CARBOIL will give quick relief. No expensive
operation ia necessary as one application of
CARBOIL promptly stops the pain and contin¬
ued use draws out the core. Get a 60c box
from your druggist. Your money back if you
are not satisfied.
SPURL45CK-NEAL CO., NASHVILLE, TENN.
A Case in Point
Howell—Overproduction is costly.
Powell—Don’t tell me that, for I
know it, being the father of twins and
realizing that two cannot be brought
up as cheaply as one.
Is Your Work Hard?
Is your work wearing you out? Are
you tortured with throbbing backache
—feel tired, weak and worn out? Then
look to your kidneys! the Many kidneys. occupa¬ Con¬
tions tend to weaken
stant backache, headaches, dizziness and
rheumatic pains result. One suffers an¬
noying kidney irregularities; feels ner
vous, irritable and worn out. Don’t wait!
Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic
to the kidneys. Workers everywhere
recommend Doan’s. They should help
you, too. Ask your neighbort
A Georgia Case
J. H. Stevenson,
farmer, Lawrence- “I
ville, Ga., cold says: and it
caught kid¬
settled In my
neys. My kidneys
acted too fre-.
quently and X har
to get up nighti
to pass the secre¬
tions. I had an'
and ache at in my times back] al
pain. My muscles __________
sharp, quick used Doan’s were Pills
stiff and drawn. I
and one box rid me of the trouble.”
D© AN’S PI i LS
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foster-Milbum Co., Mfg« Chem., Buffalo, N. Y#
DISPEL “^Why suffer when THAT skin troubles RASH yield
so easily to the healing touch of
Resinol
W. N. U., ATLANTA. NO. 15-1926.
Nineteen Sailors Who Left
Vessel in Lifeboats Be¬
lieved to Be Lost.
San Francisco.—Without food or
water and having drifted more than a
month after a storm had rendered
their vessel helpless, fourteen of the
thirty-three men of the crew of the
Japanese steamer Taishin Maru No. 3
were rescued in mid-Paeiflc by the
Standard .Oil company's tanker Java
Arrow.
The other nineteen of the crew, who
left the Taishin Maru In lifeboats, are
believed to have perished.
When the Japanese ship, with its
fuel exhausted and its cargo jetti¬
soned, was sighted by the Java Arrow
on its way from Yokohama to San
Francisco, the fourteen surviving sea¬
men, including the captain, mates and
engineers, had been without water five
days and without food, except rats and
the ship’s eat, twenty days.
Word of the rescue was relayed by
the Dollar Line’s steamship President
Wilson, 8,500 miles from this port.
The Taishin Maru left Yokohama on
January 17 for Mororan, Island of
Hokkaido, in the northern part of the
Japanese archipelago, with fitty tons
of coal as fuel.
Caught in Storm.
Caught in a storm off Shlriya, 150
miles from its destination, the Taishin
Maru, a vessel of less than 1,000 tons
and without wireless equipment, bat¬
tled head winds until its fuel was ex
Crew Ate the Cat.
hausted. Then, with its cargo thrown
overboard, the ship drifted southeast¬
ward toward mld-Pacific.
On January 29 one lifeboat with
eleven men put away from the drift¬
ing steamer. Five days later eight
men left it in a second lifeboat.
Laconically the wireless message re¬
ceived at the Federal Telegraph com¬
pany’s station here told of the depriva¬
tions of the rescued men.
“Men aboard uneat last twenty days,
no water last five,” it related. “Caught
rats, made soup. Later caught no more
rats; crew ate cat.’’
Aboard the Java Arrow bound for
San Francisco are Captain Makatani
of the Taishin Maru, the first and
second mates, the chief, first and sec¬
ond engineers and eight of the crew.
Young Mother, Dying,
Shields Babe in Crash
New York.—With her memory partly
gone but happy in the knowledge that
her six-months-old baby girl had
escaped without a scratch, Mrs, Flora
Loritsen. twenty-three, is in St. Bar¬
nabas’ hospital, Newark, probably dy¬
ing, after being run down by an auto¬
mobile at Broad and Orange streets.
Mrs. Loritzen held her baby in such
a position in the hashing moment
when she realized she had been struck
that it landed on top ot her as she
fell to the street.
At the hospital the young mother,
after being told that her baby had
escaped injury, gave her name, but
said she could not remember where
she lived nor what her husband’s
first name was. All she recalled was
that she came east with her husband
from Two Rivers, Wis., a short time
ago. She is suffering from serious
internal injuries and a possible con¬
cussion of the brain. She was well
dressed.
Finds Poor-Box Thief
Averages $40 Weekly
New York.—Willard Purbs, twenty
one years old, & clerk who was earn¬
ing 816 a week until he lost his job
several months ago, was arraigned in
Morrisania court, charged with rob¬
bing poor boxes In Catholic churches.
Purbs, whose wife is an expectant
mother, told of averaging $40 a week
from the poor boxes. He said he used
a screwdriver. It was possible to re¬
move the cash from the box and re¬
place the cover without traces of tam¬
pering, lie said. Usually he entered a
church at noon, when there were few
worshipers and emptied all the boxes.
Warns Flappers
New York.—The effect upon mother¬
hood is one physician’s most effective
argument to girls who harm them¬
selves by becoming fashionably thin.
“If you do this,” Dr. Harlow Brooks
tells them, “you won't have any
healthy children.”
CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
,7 7,,
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Builds up
weak bodies
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From Mother Nature’s storehouse
we have gathered the roots, barks
and herbs which are compounded,
under the famous Tanlac formula,
to make Tanlac.
If your body is weak and under¬
nourished, if you can’t sleep or eat,
have stomach trouble or burning
rheumatism, just you see how
quickly Tanlac can help you back
to health and strength.
Don’t delay taking Tanlac an¬
other other day. day. Stop Stop bottle at at of jour your this, druggist’s druggist the s
now and get a great
est of all tonics. constipation, Take Tanlac Vege¬
table Pills for
Delicate Babies
Need Extra Care
During Winter
Most of baby’s colds ana other
sicknesses como when constipated or
when the little stomach is upset. Yet
millions of mothers know how quickly
babies gain strength and throw off
wintry ills when a few doses of
Teethlna are given in time.
Teethina Is a baby doctor’s pre¬
scription—mild, efficient and harmless,
it removes poisonous waste from the
bowels. It regulates the liver. It
cleanses and tones the little stomach
and helps nature build up the health,
strength and vitality to throw off
these ills.
Price 30c at all leading druggists.
FREE 1 Booklet SEND FOR About USEFUL Babies.
C. J- MOFFETT CO , COLUMBUS, GA.
TEETHINA
Builds Better Babies
A lot of folks say that they do their
best work under pressure—but they
seldom get that way.
Don’t Let That Cold
Turn Into “Flu”
That cold may turn into “Flu,”
Grippe less or, take even worse, Pneumonia, un¬
you care of it at once.
Rub Musterole on the congested parts
and see how quickly it brings relief.
Musterole, made from pure oil of
mustard, camphor, menthol and other
simple which ingredients, circulation is a counter-irritant
stimulates and helps
break up the cold.
As effective as the messy old mustard
plaster; Rub it does the work without blister.
on with your finger-tips. You
will feel a warm tingle as it enters the
pores, then a cooling sensation that
brings welcome relief.
Lra Jtr Tnltoa
Better than a mustard plaster
Green’s
August Flower
for Constipation,
Indigestion and
Torpid Liver
Relieves that feeling
of having eaten unwisely. 30c and
90c bottles. AT ALL DRUGGISTS.
Plants From Guaranteed Inspected, Selected
red Porto Rican potatoes. $2.25 M. delivered.
Orders filled. Jas. A. Chauncey, Screven, Ga.
Honor Your DeadA/
with a Grave Cross '
'T'HE cross is the symbol of faith.
* Place it over the grave of your
beloved dead. It is indeed a fitting
memorial.
Badger by leading Grave Crosses arc designed
artists of ' Europe. ~ ype. They «
can be easily set up and are perma¬
nent. Priced as low as $10.00.
Send for catalog of iron crosses,
vases, mixers, fences, garden tools, con*
Crete Crete mixers, etc etc We We will wil sell you
direct from the factory.
* Wifi & Iron
loso 'Milwaukee,Wls.
aiviuxo avenge
FORD OWNERS
Startling Invention
Triples life of Ford motor. Producer
more power and speed with less gas
and oil. Our advertising plan grants
one free to one man in each town, also
chance to cash In big. Act now.
VAC-LINE ENGINEERING CO.
Altoona Pennsylvania
SO SIMPLE!
YET UNBELIEVABLY;^
- U effective! ' A
IN THE TREAT MEN^ OF
DISEASES OF THE BLOOD
P0 “.*°i3L™ CK
ACCEPT NOTHING
"Six years of stom¬
ach trouble wrecked
my lost body and nerves,
I los 28 lbs., was too
weak to walk, and
could not cal or sleep.
Tattlac restored my
nerves, might and appetite, sleep. I
bless the day I tried
it.” Mrs. G. Jack
son, 104E. 28th St.,
Chattanooga, Tenn,
(©. 192C. Western Newspaper Union.)
“Age Is an opportunity no less
Than youth itself, though in an¬
other dress;
And as the evening twilight fades
away,
The sky Is filled with stars, Invis¬
ible by day.”
FOOD FOR THE FAMILY
For those who like the old-fashioned
the will be
PlIII! pSKjpli
mr-m fl
■||i H W
-----
Sour Cream.—Cook the beans until
tender, then add sour cream to moisten
thoroughly. Place over a slow fire and
simmer one hour. Add salt and pepper
to taste.
Orange and Water Cress Salad.—
Arrange a nice bed of water cress on
a salad plate, arrange overlapping
slices of orange and serve w’ith French
dressing. Very nice to serve with
game.
Baked Onions and Cheese.—Parboil
half a dozen medium-sized onions until
nearly tender. Drain and put them
into a baking dish, then cover with a
layer of white sauce and a sprinkling
of good snappy cheese, repeat and
finish the top with a layer of buttered
crumbs. Bake in a liot oven until the
crumbs are brown.
Brown Nut Bread.—Take two cup¬
fuls of graham flour, one cupful of
wheat flour, one-half cupful of mo¬
lasses, one tablespoonful of sugar, one
teaspoonful of soda, one-half teaspoon¬
ful of salt, one cupful of raisins, and
one and one-half cupfuls of walnut
meats. Mix and bake in a moderate
Mock Crab.—Melt four tablespoon¬
fuls of butter, add one-balf cupful of
flour, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of
salt, three-fourths of a teaspoonful of
mhstard, one-fourth teaspoonful of
paprika. When well, blended pour in
gradually while stirring constantly,
one and one-balf cupfuis of scalded
milk. Bring to the boiling point and
add one can of cornlet, one egg lightly
beaten, three teaspoonfuls of Wor¬
cestershire sauce. Turn into a but¬
tered dish, cover with buttered crumbs
and bake until brown.
Onion Sandwich.—Chop a small
onion, add salt, pepper, a little vine¬
gar and oil and spread on buttered
bread.
— Split-Pea Soup.—Soak a cupful of
■split peas in two quarts of water. In
the morning put the peas over the fire
with a ham bone or piece of salt pork,
a slice of onion, and simmer for four
hours. Rub through a sieve, return to
the fire; melt two tablespoonfuls of
butter, add two of flour, mix well and
add a little soup to the consistency of
pouring. Stir into the soup and cook
five to ten minutes. Season with salt,
pepper and add one cupful of thin
cream Just at serving time.
Timely Dishes.
A good salad is always appreciated
and a good salad is one which is
dressed with a tasty
dressing.
Lettuce With Egg Sal¬
ad.—I’ut crisp head let¬
tuce cut into quarters on
salad plates after being
well chilled in cold water
and drained. Take hard
cooked eggs and put the
yolks through a ricer;
ciiop the whites very fine. Pour highly
seasoned French dressing over the let¬
tuce and sprinkle with the whites and
yolks. This makes a pretty salad to
carry out the color scheme of yellow.
Pear Salad.—Set half a canned pear
on a feiv heart leaves of lettuce. Sprin¬
kle with a few cubes of Neufclmtel
cheese and half as many strips of pi¬
mento. Take one cupful of double
cream, two tablespoonfuls of lemon
juice, four tablespoonfuls of the pear
sirup, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of
salt and four tablespoonfuls of honey.
Beat the dressing until light and pour
over the salad.
Caramel' Cornstarch Pudding.—Take
two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch, mix
and cook with one pint of milk. Put
three-fourtlis of a cupful of brown
sugar in a smooth frying pan, melt and
stir until dissolved and a golden
brown, then add the boiling hot corn¬
starch mixture. Stir until all the sugar
is well blended with the pudding, add
a pinch of salt and serve in sherbet
cups with whipped cream.
Cinnamon Rolls.—Take two cupfuls
of light bread dough, add one-half cup¬
ful of sugar, four tablespoonfuls of
shortening, cut in the mixture until
well blended. Roll out, using flour to
handle, then spread with butter, sprin¬
kle with sugar and cinnamon, roll up
and cut into small rings. Place to rise
on a baking sheet; dust with brown
sugar just before baking.
Spring Salad.'—Slice crisp red rad¬
ishes very thin, add sliced green on¬
ions and a little chopped green pepper.
Serve on lettuce with a mayonnaise
dressing.
Tomatoes and tomato juice are in¬
valuable aids in the diet of young or
old. Use the fresli tomatoes, canned,
or the juice—all good for children.
Dishes made chiefly from milk, fish,
meat, poultry and eggs with meat sub¬
stitutes form the most important
group in a well-balanced ration. Then
come cereals, breads, fats,'of which
Mulled Buttermilk—
Take five cupfuls of but
stir a tablespoon
of flour into a little
(be buttermilk, add
j cook until honing
Season with cinna
sugar or nutmeg.
Beans With
Is your car a
General Motors
Car?
I F Oldsmobile, Cadillac,you YOU own a an own Chevrolet, Oakland, a General a a Pontiac, Motors Buick or car. an a
“But what,” you may ask, “does that
mean to me?” It means just this:
General Motors is a family of companies
building motor cars and trucks and such
other famous automotive products as Fisher
Bodies, Delco and Remy electrical systems,
Harrison radiators and AC sparkplugs. Still
other General Motors products are Deko
Light electric power plants and Frigidaire
electric refrigerators. There are General
Motors plants in 44 cities, employing
120,000 people; and sales and service
organizations in 144 countries.
General Motors uses the combined
resources of this great family for the benefit
of each member.lt effects great savings in the
purchase of quality materials; it provides the
best of engineering talent; it maintains the
world’s largest research laboratories and
proving ground for automobiles; and it
assures the permanence of its various divi¬
sions and the products which they make.
In other words, General Motors has every
facility and every incentive to maintain
quality and to offer value for the price; and
the curreut models of General Motors cars
are offered as the greatest values in the his¬
tory of the automobile industry.
GENERAL
MOTORS
CHEVROLET * PONTIAC » BUICK
OLDSMOBILE * OAKLAND
CADILLAC ' CMC TRUCKS
“A car for every purse and purpose”
General Motors cars and trucks, Delco-Light electric
plants and Frigidaire electric refrigerators may bs
purchased on the QMAC Plan, provided by General
Motorsitselftoassurcsoundtermsaml low finance rates.
Plenty
“Have you any poor relations?”
“Well, two of my cousins are in
the hairpin business."
A Splendid First Aid Remedy
for Cuts, Burns, Wounds and Sores is
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh. Antiseptic
ind healing. Three sizes; all stores.—Adv.
Sometimes there is a fortunately
gifted mind that doesn’t need training
to appreciate art.
What yesterday was fact, today is
doctrine.—Junius.
Use Alabastine
to save
Alabastine Sill WSSf
• dry powder in white
and tints Packed in 5
pound packages, ready ,
i —
for use by mixing with
cold or warm water.
Full directions on ev¬
ery with package. Apply
brush. an ordinary wall
Suitable for all
interiorsurfaces—pias¬ wall board, m
ter, brick,
cement, or canvas.
wtrfZ.
Any Color IbuWknt
Why use expensive paper or paint when
for the cost of cleaning either you can
have a fresh coat of Alabastine? Why
put up with half soiled walls when for
a little expense your home can be made
bright and cheerful? With Alabastine
you can have the exact color you wish.
And it won’t rub off. You can match
exactly rugs or draperies. You can get
the most artistic results. You can do the
work yourself if the decorators are not
available. Ask your dealer for an Ala¬
bastine color card. Or write Miss Ruby
Brandon, Home Beautiful Specialist, the
Alabastine Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Got None
“Money is the root of ail evil.”
“Most of us are blameless.”—Louis¬
ville Courier-Journal,
Why huy many bottles of other verml-;
fuges when one bottle of Dr. Peery's Peery' a ”Dea<5L
Shot” will work without fail? Adv.
The climate and soil of the uplands
of East Africa are similar to the ellJ
mate and soil of the Middle West ofi
the United States.
Tom, Dick and Harry are consid-j
ered by some, better company than!
Faith, Hope and Charity.