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FAMILY DOCTOR
LEARNED THIS ABOUT
CONSTIPATION
Dr. Caldwell loved petfple. His
years of practice convinced him
many were ruining their health by
careless selection of laxatives. He
determined to write a harmless pre¬
scription which would get at the
cause of constipation, and correct it.
Today, the prescription he popular wrote
in 1885 is the world’s most
laxative! He prescribed ingredients a mixture
of herbs and other pure
now known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
Pepsin, in thousands of cases where
bad breath, coated tongue, gas,
headaches, biliousness and lack of
appetite or energy showed the
bowels of men, women and children
were sluggish. It proved successful
in even the most obstinate cases;
old folks liked it for it never gripes;
children liked its pleasant taste.
AH "drugstores today have Dr.
I Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin in bottles.
tfanfortiPs
Balsam off IVSyrrh
Since 1846 has promoted healing
for Man and Beast
All dealer* are authorised to refund your money
tor the first bottle it not suited,
Another Bird Refuge
A new bird refuge lias been estab¬
lished on a group of islands off the
tip of Florida by executive order of
President Hoover. The group consists
of Snake key, North key and Dead
Man or Bird key. It will be known, as
the Cedar keys bird refuge and will
he administered by the biological sur¬
vey of the United States Department
of Agriculture.
r -
In Thi. Weather
"I am burning with love for yon!"
"Oh, don’t make a fuel of your¬
self.”—Vancouver Province.
Weak After
Operation
“About five months ago,
following an operatioft for
appendicitis I did not gain
about. strength enough to be up and
advised My mother and sister
me to take Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
bottles pound. I have taken five
and it has helped do me to
get Housework strong so I can my own
now. I have recom¬
mended it to several friends
who have been weak and run¬
down.”—Mrs. Oscar Otturn,
Box 474, Thief River Falls, M inn.
Lydia E. Piiikliam's
Vegetable Compound
l b. Prnkham Med.Co., Lynn, Mass.
FRESH PAINT
Highest Quality at Reasonable Prices
Guaranteed house paint at $2.50 per
gallon; barn paint, red and brown,
$1.45 per gallon. Freight prepaid.
Send for color card.
DEGEN PAINT COMPANY
1432 Genesee St. - - Buffalo, N. Y.
Singing Cage and Canary, Stand $10.50
Every canary is guaranteed to sing and is sold
with a two weeks’ trial. If not satisiactorv can bo
exchanged for another canary of equal value.
SAFE Write LIVE for Free Catalog UuuvanUtd
and An'irai
C LG LEY A MULLEN CO.
Dept. B. - 1231 Arch St.. Phila.
The Largest Bird Store in the World
_
SAWS’i™L“ trial, money refund¬
ed If not O- K. in hard or frozen timber.
ITtteif littetf in with with better, Sitttuiids Stmomls “tiliu* •*Hlno Tip" Tip" btt, btt, they they
*tay cut easier, ami Iat»t longer.
J H. MINER SAW MFG. CO.
Columbia,S.C., Shravaport, La.. Meridian, Mip. ,
START TO-DAY
Clear & Whiten your Skin
Look jo years younger
Have a clear, soft, velvet
skin. Freckles, tan and
all blemishes vanish like
magic. Will not injure
the skin. Use Marvelo VjrVjv'
_ Bleach Creme, 60 cts. at
druggists, or aend to—
Pure Drue Products Co.. Box 492, Cincinnati, 0.
iimmr
Public Interested in
Exterior of Buildings
Most buildings are visible from the
streets, which belong to the com¬
munity, and therefore the interests of
the community os a whole, as regards
external appearance, should not be
sacrificed to the wishes of the owners
of individual buildings, says Professor
Wilkinson, fellow of the Iloyal Insti
tue of British Architects, in "Archi¬
tecture.”
The interior arrangement and treat¬
ment of buildings are a mutter for tiie
owner, and will affect comparatively
few people, but the external appear¬
ance will affect tens of thousands. By
"externai’C one does not mean the
facades only, but all parts which may
be visible.
We know what results without con¬
trol. At present we usually have a
parade of aggressive affection in the
way of competitive advertisement,
often conceived with a deliberate striv¬
ing after the unusual in order to at¬
tract attention.
Freedom from control has made our
cities less pleasant places to live and
work in than ttiey ueed he. This free¬
dom is a present-day characteristic of
many things besides architecture, but
is it a good thing? Without control we
get chaos, waste and ill will. The
freedom of the many necessitates the
control of the few.
Needs of Town Library
Something of Problem
A library building may be stored
i with ail the wisdom of the ages, and
: yet, unless it can attract readers, it
I might as well close its doors. The
average town library reader looks to
his local library for entertainment.
The tired business man is less eager
in pursuit of knowledge than the
bright high-school pupil. The library,
liberally supported front the town
treasury, must give him something for
his money. It is necessary, then, to
make n Judicious selection among the
novels of the moment, of the making
of which there is no end. A story of
real merit is always worth the price
paid; but it often happens that books
bought on the recommendation of one
or another readers prove disappoint¬
ing. Some libraries have had a rule
that no work of fiction shall be (lur¬
ch used until, say, two years after the
date of publication, the theory being
that a story which retained Its popu¬
larity for so long must be worth hav¬
ing; but this rule Is too severe. Many
excellent stories are forgotten after
six months. There seems to be no
way with regard to fiction, other than
to select among the best sellers ns
best one can.—Portland Oregonian.
Home’s Resale Value
Many people today In buying a
home keep in mind its possible quick
resale value. A hundred years ago,
with conditions so very different from
now, men and women bought homes
for generations to come. Now there
are many different reasons which make
it desirable and even necessary for a
family to change; perhaps even to
move to another city. Therefore it is
merely the part of wisdom to consider
the home purchase to a certain ex¬
tent at least in the light of an invest¬
ment.
Choosing a home with obvious ac¬
cepted standard values, assuming that
on other points it is acceptable, means
that it will sell more easily—should a
sale become necessary—than a home
which borders on the bizarre or the
"too different."
Zoning Activity Spreading
That a steadily Increasing number
of municipalities are taking steps to
| protect property values through zon¬
ing regulations, is shown in a survey
I just completed by the division of
i building and housing of the Depart
! meat of Commerce,
j In 1916, the survey shows, zoning
j regulations were in number force in only
eight cities. The Increased
slowly until 1920, after which the
progress was rapid. At the end of
1928, n toal of 754 cities, towns and
villages in all parts of the country,
having a total population in excess
of 37.000,000, had regulations designed
to promote construction and use of
buildings so as to conserve the inter¬
ests of home owners and other prop¬
erty holders, in conformance with the
public welfare.
Plant Trees to Mark Dates
This looking ahead to the country
| beautiful memorial leads to memorial roads tree plant¬
ing, walks, of remem¬
brance, memorial parks, memorial for¬
ests. There is no program to which
tree planting does not lend itself says
the American Tree association of
Washington, which will send you free
tree planting instructions. Graduat¬
ing classes plant memorial walks, a
! birth date is marked by tree planting,
any form of stone memorial should be
i given the proper setting of memorial
I trees.
Training City Planner
i The city planner is needed; more in
I some places than In others, but gen
erally needed. He will do good work.
The more he knows the better work
he will do. The new Harvard school
will turn out city planners who will
j know city planning the way a lawyer
knows, and perhaps better.—BostoD
1 Herald.
CLEVELAND COURIER.
iVieec/
Pain!
The man who wouldn’t drive his
motorcar half a mile when it’s out of
order, will often drive his brain all
day with a head that’s throbbing.
Such punishment isn’t very good
for one’s nerves! It’s unwise, and
it’s unnecessary. A tablet or two
of Bayer Aspirin will relieve a head¬
ache every time. So, remember
this accepted antidote for pain, and
spare yourself a lot of needless suf¬
fering. Read the proven directions
and you’ll discover many valuable answered that question years ago.
uses for these tablets. For head¬ It is not. Some folks still wonder if
aches; to check colds. To ease a it really does relieve pain. That’s
sore throat and reduce the infection. settled! For millions of men and
Fer relieving neuralgic, neuritic, women have found it does. To
rheumatic pain. cure the cause of any pain you must
oonsult your doctor; but you may
People used to wonder if Bayer always turn to Bayer Aspirin for
Aspirin was harmful. The doctors immediate relief.
II AYE It ASPIRIN
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticaeidester of Salicylicadd
Creepers, Crawlers, Hoppers
Mistress—What I want Is a girl who
can detect the little things about the
house, you know.
New Girl—Mariam, there Isn’t any¬
thing that creeps, crawls, or hops
that can escape me,—New Bedford
Standard.
Jtet CoilfcntijSfiEiRKlB
[ QWliliWSl
CASTOR!
ALCOMOL-3* JPtRciKt niMlirtrli 1
AWfeUWfMlMM Wfc,. .
SEgg£| OMrfitwM I
fitept </ CMDt SCfGti A7IJW j
Children Kate to take medicine
ns a rule, but every child loves the
taste vegetable good of as Castoria, it preparation tastes; And just is this as just bland pure as ifijSSS.
and harmless as the recipe reads.
|(The wrapper tells you just what
Castoria contains.)
When Baby’s cry warns of colic, deserves a place in the family
a few drops of Castoria has him medicine cabinet until your child
soothed, asleep again in a jiffy. is grown. He knows it is safe for
Nothing is more valuable in diar¬ the tiniest baby; effective for a
rhea. When coated tongue or bad boy in his teens. With this special
breath tell of constipation, invoke children’s remedy handy, you need
its gentle aid to cleanse and regu¬ never risk giving a boy or girl
late a child’s bowels. In colds or medicine meant for grown-ups.
children’s diseases, use it to keep Castoria is sold in every drug
the system from clogging. Your store; the genuine always bears
doctor will tell you Castoria Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature.
It is easier for a man to shut up
a hundred-ton safe than a hundred
pound wife.
One ought to have judgment enough
to take a rest before tire doctor tells
him lie has to.
Night Life Gets You if You
Don’t Watch Out!
War Vet almost takes
count, but pals help.
TTOW would you like it if every
-Lii. two weeks you had to give up
your good night’s sleep, and work all
night instead? This is what hap¬
pened to W. H. Huggins of 90
Savannah Street, Rochester, New
York. When he came back from the
War, he took a night “shift” job.
“It certainly shot me all to pieces,”
said Mr. Huggins. “I was licked
before I started. My pals noticed
that the night shift got me, so during
a lunch’ period in the middle of one
night one of them said to me, 'Hug,
I bet I know what’s the matter with
you. This irregular life gets us all
unless we watch out. Why don’t you
tryNujol? Most of the boys are
onto this little health trick. Try it!’
“WeH, that very night on the
way home I got a bottle and within
a week I felt like a different person.
I wouldn’t know myself. You can
lick any job, even a night one, if you
get the poisons out of your system
regularly. Nujol sure did it for me!”
That’s tue great thing about
Labor Problem
Visitor—Why do you take there
magazines? There’s nothing in them
hut serial stories.
Housewife—Well, the servants get
interested in them and stay on just to
see how the stories end.—Montreal
Star.
The man who steals kisses is liable
eventually to find himself serving a
life sentence.
As nice as we are in love, we for¬
give more faults in that than in
friendship.—Henry Horne.
This kind of man wins no
matter where yon put him
Nujol. It absorbs the poisons in your
system (we all have them) and
cleans them out regularly. It cannot
hurt you no matter how long you
take it, and it forms no habit.
Nujol contains no medicines or
drugs. It is simply the world’s most
famous method of bodily lubrication.
You can get a bottle at any good
drug store, in a sealed package, for
less than the cost of a couple of good
cigars. Begin today to prove to
yourself how Nujol can help you to
lick the toughest job and feel bully!
BURN BABY TO
DEATH DURING
CATANIA FEUD
Members of Wealthy Italian
Convicted.
Rome.—A strange feud among the
members of a wealthy family in Ca¬
tania in which tiie infant son of one
contending member was mysteriously
burned in his cradle, appears to have
been settled with the arrett of Prof.
Dante Maiorana, a former deputy, and
his wife, Signora Ainato Maiorana.
They are accused of employing cer¬
tain persons to set fire to their small
nephew’s bed clothing.
Start of the Feud.
The feud began shortly after Pro¬
fessor Maiorana and iris brother, Prof.
Giuseppe Maiorana, married the two
daughters of itosario Amato, a
wealthy confectioner. Amato died.
Immediately there developed a quarrel
between the two sisters and their hus¬
bands on one hand and their younger
brother, Ninl Amato, over tiie division
of the estate. The bitter feeling grew
as the months passed.
Then come the “accident” to tiie
young son of Nini Amato. There was
a police investigation and a trial, the
upshot of which was that Rosario Sci
otti, Marla Gagliardi, the latter’s
daughter, Carmela, and her son, Giu¬
seppe Gagliardi, were found guilty of
Set Fire to the Bed Clothing.
the crime and sentenced to various
prison terms.
On being sentenced, Sc-iott! fell into
a furious rage and shouted that the
real culprit was Prof. Dante Maior¬
ana. The accusation wns too startling.
Nobody believed it, and Professor Mai
orana sued Seiotti for slander.
L’rof. Giuseppe Maiorana joined his
brother in the suit, considering that
Ids name, too, had been dishonored.
The defendants were acquitted of the
slander charge. But still suspicion
failed to turn against Dante and his
wife.
Finds Real Culprits.
Meantime Salvatore Maiorana, a
student, son of Prof. Dante Maiorana,
happened to meet his uncle and enemy,
Nini Amato, in a tavern one day and
threatened him with a revolver. For
this the student was given a sentence
of three months.
With this third hashing over in court
of the feud. Prosecutor General Colo
netti finally had his suspicions turned
to Dante Maiorana and his wife. Colo
netti started a new investigation on
the theory this time that the latter
pair were the real culprits and that
they had employed Seiotti and the
Gagliardis to set fire to the Amato
child’s bed clothing. They were speed¬
ily convicted.
Wife Plays Trombone;
Husband Uses Shears
Cleveland, Ohio.—George Wilson,
thirty-four, decided he was a “trom¬
bone widower.” He resented being that
and became active about it. He was
arraigned before Municipal Judge Jo¬
seph Sawicki on a charge of assault
and battery against his wife.
Wilson inflicted a flesh wound on his
partner, Mrs, Elizabeth Wilson. He
used a pair of scissors because she
played the trombone all day and went
to musieales where she could get a
line on new trombone selections to
play at night at home.
"She played and played and played
—and nearly drove me crazy,” Wilson
told the judge.
“Suddenly, 1 couldn’t stand it any
more. When she hit a high one the
other day I couldn’t help myself. Not
that 1 don’t like trombones, Judge, but
she overdid it.”
The judge told Wilson to take his
choice—the trombone or the work
house.
“I’ll get some cotton to put in my
ears,” he said sadly.
Wisconsin “Muskie”
Bites at Boy’s Legs
Couderay, Wis.—A pair of bleeding
legs belonging to five-year-old Buddie
Houlan bore witness to the prize “fish
story” of the season hera
Buddie's scream from the pier
where be sat dangling his feet in a
lake brought his father to his side in
time to frighten away a huge muskel
lunge that was biting the boy’s legs.
This Little Girl
Got Well Quick
5"
l,‘-‘3"-5::’-5{';s¥1 ‘fw »‘2‘?r§rm . r’~"‘>';;
bowels wouldn’t act
right, she had no appetite and nothing
agreed with her.
“Our physician told us to give her
some California Fig Syrup. It made
her pick up right away, and now she
is as robust and happy as any child
in our neighborhood. I give California
Fig Syrup full credit for her wonder¬
ful condition. It is a great thing for
children.”
Children like the rich, fruity taste
of California Fig Syrup, and you can
give it to them as often as they need
it, because it is purely vegetable. For
over 50 years leading physicians have
recommended it, and its overwhelming
sales record of over four million bot¬
tles a year shows it gives satisfaction.
Nothing compares with it as a gentle
but certain laxative, and it goes fur¬
ther than this. It regulates the stom¬
ach and bowels and gives tone and
strength to these organs so they con¬
tinue to act normally, of their own
accord.
There are many imitations of Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup, so look for the name
“California" on the carton to be sure
you get the genuine.
^nnsliinlt Health Giving -vpa
AH Winter Long
Marvelous Climate — Good Hotels — Tourist
Lamps—-Splendid Roads—*Gorgeous Mountain
Views* The iconderfu l desert resort of the West
■gr|^ | Write Oreo Spariiag^ A Chaffoy
I lib
*-___t VI.IFOIl’VlA _ ^
MY BEGINNER’S BOOK will enable your
child to read. My youngest pupil of 2 years
8 months recites real lessons. Copy 50c.
SAMUEL HOWARD - COLUMBUS, 1ND.
COPEN, MARKET CABBAGE PLANTS
ready; .400, 75c; 1,000, $1.50 postpaid.
EMERALD FARMS - - MEIGS. GA.
Everything Fixed for
Speed in Elopement
The modern Romeo was making ar¬
rangements for eloping with his Juliet.
“Now, darling,” he said, “we’ll run
over our schedule for tiie last time.
The car wiil be at the door just be¬
fore midnight. You understand that?”'
“Y’es, precious.”
“I’ll creep round to your window
and throw a handful of stones up
against it to let you know I’m there..
Do you follow me, swetheart?”
“Absolutely, my own.”
“You will then creep downstair*
with your suitcase. You’ll be quite
ready with it when I arrive, won’t
you ?”
She nodded.
“Quite, dearest,” she replied. “Moth¬
er is packing it for me now!”
Today
“Do your employees watch the
clock?”
“No, only tiie stock ticker.”—Louis¬
ville Courier-Journal.
m 1EADACHE
S M Instead of dangerous heart de¬
ll 1 # m P r, ' ssa,!ts safe, mild, purely
J vegetable NATURE'S REMEDY
M and get rid of the bowel poisons
■B that cause the trouble. Noth
m ing like Nt for biliousness, sick
a headache and constipation. Acts
I pleasantly. Never gripes.
At druggists Mild, safe, purely vegetable
--only 25c. Make the test tonight.
FEEL LIKE A MILLION. TAKE
Claimed She Had Proof
Senator McNary said in the course
of an argument at a Washington
luncheon:
“He claims that he understands the
farm problem, but the proofs he ad¬
vances remind me of the movie star.
“She was jilting a book and eye
man. and he said to her bitterly:
“ ‘You don’t know what love is.’
“ ‘I do so. I know all about it,’ said
the movie star. ‘Wasn’t I dead stuck
on my fifth husband ?’ ”—Detroit Free
Press.
Every one is as God made him,
and often a great deal worse.—Cer¬
vantes.
For as few friends as a cat has, It
lives pretty well.
NEW COMFORT
\ The FRAME Uty \
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DAYS TRIAL
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........MAIL COUPON TODAY........
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Dept. W. N. L. 3, Chicago, Illinois.
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Xame ........................ Age..,..*
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Town .................... State ....«••«
"Just after her third
birthday, my little
daughter, Connie, had
a serious attack of in¬
testinal flu,” says Mrs.
H. W. Turnage, 217
Cadwalder St., San
Antonio, Texas. “It
left her very weak