Newspaper Page Text
CODE of the NORTH
SYNOPSIS
Stephen Drake, with his four-year
old son, is rescued from a biizsard by
Jim Flynn, big: timber operator, whom
Drake has robbed. Flynn forgives the
theft, and Drake, until his death, im¬
presses on the boy, Steve, the debt they
owe “Old Jim.'* Twenty years later,
Steve meets “Young Jim" Flynn, his
benefactor’s son. Sent by Old Jim, in¬
capacitated through an accident in
which Kate, his daughter, Js tempo¬
rarily blinded, to take charge of the
company’s—the Polaris—woods op¬
erations, the youth ts indulging in a
drunken spreed. Learning of Polaris'
dire straits, and hoping to do some¬
thing for Old Jim, Steve hastens to
the company’s headquarters. He finds
Franz, a scoundrel, plotting against
the Flynn interests. Worsting Franz
in a fist fight, the Polaris crew, by
lucky chance, assumes that he is
Flynn’s son, and he does not disillusion
them. Steve takes charge, as “Young
Jim." A photograph of beautiful Kate
Flynn, which Steve finds, immensely
Increases his desire to aid Old Jim.
He learns MacDonald, eccentric old
Scotsman, holds timber vital to the
Polaris interests.
CHAPTER III—Continued
—5— '
Steve decided to watch LaFane
closely. Just now he was chaining
some setters and, after a moment,
with a final playful toss of the young¬
est child, set off into the woods with
two bird dogs. After he went, a great,
gray creature that had been pacing at
his chain length while La Fane sat on
the bench, but which lay flat, head
on his paws, while the man was near,
rose to his feet. He resumed that
restless pacing, hack and forth, back
and forth, watching the children with
ears stiff. . . .
For another hour Steve and McNally
talked and might have continued so
until noon had not a shrill, long
drawn scream brought them to their
feet.
Steve was first to the window. He
saw LaFane’s three children on the
beach, walking toward the store, the
youngest with a hand held by each of
the others. The scream came again
and they turned and saw what Drake
saw, a huge, wolf-like dog, a length of
chain attached to his collar curling
and snapping behind him, racing along
the sand, head low, the hair along
his back on end.
A man appeared In the doorway of
the store, looked out and whirled back.
The children stood still an instant and
then the eldest, with a frightened cry,
tugged at the baby’s hand and ran for
sanctuary.
“Come on!” cried Drake. "Get a
gun, Mac!’’
He vaulted nut the window and ran
to Intercept the dog but he could not
cover the distance rapidly enough. He
could hear the ragged roar in the ani¬
mal’s throat as he swerved a bit to
circle the quarry, could see the orange
glitter in his eyes and the flicker of
saliva on his lips.
“Hi!” he yelled in a voice sharp
with fear. “Hi, you !”
He might as well have whispered to
the winds of heaven!
The children had stopped, were hud¬
dled together as the dog, lashing with
his fangs at the youngest, ripping a
slash in her dress but evidently miss¬
ing flesh, went past, whirling to a
stop. His feet clawed in the wet sand
for hold to turn and be at them again.
The man reappeared in the store
doorway, rifle butt against his cheek.
“Don’t shoot!” Steve cried. "Don’t—”
No need of that warning; the man
saw that he could not send a saving
bullet without grave clanger of having
It injure the child. He came down the
steps, limping badly, and hobbled for¬
ward.
The largest girl, sweeping the others
behind her protectingly, stooped,
scooped her hands full of pebbles and
sand and as the dog rushed her,
fangs hared, flung the grit full in his
face.
It drove him, blinking and raging,
from his course, made his rush harm¬
less and gave Steve Drake time to
close in.
No more than time. The dog leaped
for the baby and bore her down. The
teeth had missed a hold but Steve saw
blood on the child's cheek where a
paw had raked, ns he raised a foot
for the kick that lifted the animal,
spun him about and threw him clear
of the little girl.
"Pick her up 1 Get her away! Run!”
he shouted to the largest, stamping
and kicking at the dog.
His toe caught the beast on the
point of the nose as he leaped in to
accept this challenge. With a short
yelp the creature hacked away, cir
cling, and Steve, not taking his eyes
from him, stooped and seized a stout
hardwood stick which lay on the sand.
The dog had forgotten the running
children, evidently. He circled the
man, jaws drooling, eyes fixed. Steve,
turning as the dog moved, braced him¬
self for the rush which he knew would
come.
When it did come it was with that
suddenness which only a creature with
the wild in his blood could summon.
He hurtled straight at the man.
With a grunt, Drake put the whole
of his strength into the blow. The
club caught the animal along the ribs,
knocked the breath from him in a
belching grunt and sent him rolling.
He went over twice, chain wrapping
about his body, and even though the
man closed quickly, raining blows, he
scuttled free and circled briefly at a
safe distance.
Once again he rushed, hurling his
hundred pounds of fury through the
air, straight for Steve’s throat. This
time the club caught him atop the
skull a-d he went dowo with a yelp.
By HAROLD TITUS
Copyright by Hu-old Tltua
WNU Service
The limping Individual with the rifle
was eiose, shouting, his weapon at his
shoulder.
"Put up that gun!” Steve snapped.
“You'll get me—”
He struck at the dog’s back, but the
animal thrqw himself sideways, going
with the blow and, scuttling a few feet
to safety, whirled again.
“Now!” panted McNally, coming
with a gun himself. “Get back 1 I’ll
fix him!”
“Let him alone,” said Drake, lifting
his eyes just long enough to see the
children disappearing into the doorway
of the store, to see their mother, who
had run past him, close behind them.
“This seems to be a kind of personal
matter.”
Indeed It was. The look in the dog’s
eyes was of such unmistakable hatred,
so intense, so personal that it carried
a direct challenge.
Again a rush, but this time the ani¬
mal feinted, went under the swinging
club and slashed at Steve's thigh as
he passed. The fangs missed by
inches. But the next time the club
found its mark, blood slavered from
the dog’s lip and he backed off slowly,
grudgingly until Drake, setting his foot
on the dragging chain, checked his
retreat,
Steve walked down that chain with
the precision of a tightrope walker,
keeping his full weight always on it,
and the dog, digging iiis feet into the
sand, strained backward with all his
strength, throwing his head from side
to side as he sought to tear free. . . .
The animal was belly down, now,
and Drake raised the club high. One
fair blow on the skull and—
“Let me take him,” said a voice
close behind.
LaFane was looking at the great
beast, face unperturbed, but he was
<■11 11 m mum
But the Next Tim* the Club Found
Its Mark.
breathing quickly and when he turned
his gaze to the others an expression
lay in the eyes such as Drake had
never seen before.
“What you were going to do would
spoil my chance,” he said quietly.
“Chance?” Steve demanded in¬
credulously. “Chance for what?”
“To save myself in the eyes of my
children, perhaps. Let him go . . .
please.’’
Amazed, Drake hesitated; then took
his weight from the chain. The dog
turned to skulk away, licking his
chops.
LaFane spoke: “Duke!” The word
was crisp and sharp, not loud “Come
In!”
The animal hesitated, stopped; the
tail dropped between his legs, he low¬
ered his head in shame or fear.
“Come in!’’ his owner insisted and
snapped his thumb. Slowly, then,
belly to the sand, the dog slunk
toward him.
“Good Lord, man, are you going to
keep that thing around after what al¬
most happened?”
“Yes,” said LaFane. “And because
of what almost happened.” He
searched Drake’s face and his mouth
twitched. “If I killed him before I
made him safe for them, what would
the children think of me?”
Steve scratched his head.
“Well, that’s one way to look at it,”
he muttered. “But what . . .”
LaFane, evidently, was not interest¬
ed in what Drake had been about to
ask.
“Heel!” he said and started for the
store, dog close behind.
He did not look at the creature
again. The children and his wife were
in the doorway, the woman trying to
still the frantic crying of the youngest.
The man brushed her aside, almost
roughly. He took the babe in his hands
and held her out before him. Then,
with a quick movement, he crushed
her close, putting his cheek to her
scratched cheek, wrapping his arms
about her.
He started off for his home as others
approached. The dog slunk at his
heels. As he passed, Drake saw that
tears were on the man’s face.
“A queer one, for sure,” he said,
thinking of McNally's words.
That afternoon Steve found LaFane
In the store.
“I want to send a telegram in to
town.” he said. "Can you start early
In the morning?”
"I will start now,” he said.
“That's fine of you but it isn’t nec¬
essary.”
CLEVELAND COURIER
"Anything you want of me I will do,
Young Jim,” LaFane said quietly. “If
you had not been here . . He
shrugged. “I have you to thank for
something which is priceless.”
He went out abruptly and Steve felt
that In those few words he had con¬
veyed as much feeling as most men
could in an oration.
The message which Steve sent out,
addressed to Katharine Flynn, was as
follows:
“Am on job. Situation bad but
nothing is impossible. Don’t expect
letters until I have something to re¬
port Jim.”
He had experienced some, qualms
about the signature, but it had to be.
No concern would be content to know
that a stranger held its destinies in
his hands and he knew that the truth
would be the last straw for the burden
which Old Jim and his daughter bore.
Immediately, he commenced, inform¬
ing himself of the Polaris holdings.
He went to Inspect the proposed route
of the railroad, temporarily, at least,
blocked. He looked over other possi¬
ble routes; all, he agreed, were out erf
the question because of the nature of
the terrain.
“It looks,” he told himself, “as
though we’ll have to beat either Franz
or this other man, MacDonald.”
On the fourth day, after meeting
with Wartin and the wood-choppers
and conceding to their demands, feel¬
ing guilty at spending another’s money
and yet bolstered by the knowledge
that It was the only way out, Steve set
out to inspect the lower river.
McNally was busy and Steve, want¬
ing some one familiar with the coun¬
try along, asked LaFane to go in the
canoe with him.
For a mile no word was spoken.
Then LaFane said, “This is the-Laird’s
line.”
Steve was wondering about the own¬
er and how he might be approached
when they shot around a sharp bend,
coming from strong current to a quiet,
velvety pool.
It was a surprise to see another
canoe there, and a sort of shock to ob¬
serve Franz in the stern, holding it in
tlie shallows by a paddle against
bottom. A decided shock, however, to
meet the peculiarly angered glare
turned on him by the whitq-haired
mountain of a man who sat in the
bow, a fly rod in his huge hands.
“Thanks!” was his first word, spoken
bitterly. “Thanks, Meester LaFane ’nd
yer companion! Thanks fer puttin'
doon th’ grandest fish that swims th’
stream!”
Steve turned the canoe quickly toto
the shallows and brought jt **■ -a halt.
“I’m sorry, sir!” he ’satlt.T- “VYe
couldn’t see around the bend. I didn't
know—”
“See! Know! What gude’d it've
done, had ye? What gude to nte. I’d
choose to know!” His gray eyes
burned.
“I wouldn’t have done it for the
world, sir!” Steve protested. “I know
what it is myself, to work over a
fish.”
“Ay! WI’ spinner, likely! Most
yoong men use th’ spinner. They’re
not anglers; ^t takes an angler to
ken!”
“Yes,” Steve agreed. “A splnn«r
fisherman, a plunker wouldn’t under¬
stand. For them, a fish Is meat. For
the dry fly . . . He's something else
again. I'm sorry. Come on, LaFane.”
He spun the canoe about and they
proceeded. He was conscious that the
Scotchman was eyeing him, something
like puzzlement evidently mingling
with his ill humor.
LaFane spoke after a time:
“It’s little tilings that touch him
off . . . or win his friendship.
Likely, he won’t speak to you for
months.”
They rounded a bend or two and
the voice of the river became a mutter.
“We stop here,” LaFane said.
“That’s Twenty Mile rapid below us.
A man don’t run it unless he has to.
And then, only some get through.”
They benched at a trail and stepped
out. A sharp bend wa3 below and
following the narrow ledge of rocks,
they moved along to where they could
see the beginning of the rapid. Steve
shrugged as he surveyed the rock
strewn torrent.
“Franz did it once,” LaFane said, as
though sensing what his companion’s
shrug indicated. “Two years ago. It’»
what got him into good standing with
MacDonald. MacDonald couldn’t do
it even in his younger days, and he
was a good man, too. Some men ar#
like that: they'll have nothing to de
with any other until he can beat them
at something they’re good in. Fran*
is no fool.”
Steve thought this last might have
been added as a warning. And he
thought again that this companion was
a strange creature.
The Laird was not In sight on their
return and when they came to the
pool where his great trout lived Steve
called a halt and sat there for many
minutes, peering down into the dark
water. It was a superb lair for a big
fish, presenting hazards which would
put the best of anglers to a disad¬
vantage. For some time they re¬
mained there, moving up and down
while Steve, though saying little,
studied the character of the bend.
As they entered Good-Bye lake again
LaFane, apropos of nothing at all,
said:
“Old Jim left a fly rod and tackle
here two years ago. I have fresh lead
ers.”
“Thanks,” muttered Steve *o 4
grinned. This fehow was good!
(TO BE OONTINUJSD.J
(~* BEAT BRITAIN formally notified
the United States that It would
not pay anything on the war debt In¬
stallment due June 15; that It would
make no more payments until the
United States consents to a downward
revision of the debt, and that any dis¬
cussion of revision at this time would
be useless. All of which means plain
default The British *ii>te was sent In
response to a blunt notification from
President Roosevelt as to the sums
due. It was evident, from foreign dis¬
patches, that the other debtor nations,
except Finland, would follow the
course adopted by the British.
In his war debt message to congress
the President said this country ex¬
pected the debtor nations to pay un¬
less satisfactory excuses could be of¬
fered, and he called attention to the
vast sums those nations are expend¬
ing on armaments. His plain language
was not at all pleasing to the nations
that owe us nearly twelve and one
half billion dollars.
'T'HERE ■1 was rejoicing In Belgium
when it was announced that a son
had been born to the new king and
queen, Leopold and Astrid, Mother
and child were reported to be doing
well. The monarchs, who were mar¬
ried in 1926, have two other children,
Josephine Charlotte, six, and Baudoin,
three, heir apparent to the throne.
•‘-’I A/fUCH interesting information was
given the special house commit¬
tee that is investigating “un-American”
activities in the United States, these
being especially the
activities of the Nazis.
Facts and figures
were presented show¬
ing officials of the
German government
had spent money for
the dissemination of
pro-German informa¬
tion in this country,
the German ambassa¬
dor, Dr. Hans Luther,
and the German con¬
sul general in New
York, Dr. Otto Kiep,
figuring in the testimony.
Doctor Kiep was said to have paid
$4,000 to a New York city publicity
aqd business promotion firm to “obtain
publicity in this country” of anti
Semitic statements. He was said, also,
to have contributed, unofficially and in
behalf of a third person, $800 in $50
bills for the publication of a pro-Ger¬
man pamphlet. Doctor Luther was de¬
scribed as the financial backer and
sponsor of the pamphlet.
Under examination, Carl Dickey,
partner in the New York firm of Carl
Byoir and Associates, said his firm has
a contract with the German tourist In¬
formation office, receiving $6,000 a
month “giving advice, counsel, and
getting together material for travel
information.”
About twice a month, too, he testi¬
fied, a sheet titled “German-American
Economic Bulletin” is prepared and
mailed to a “list of about 3,000 news¬
papers and some few business institu¬
tions.”
One witness, Rev. Francis Gross of
Perth Amboy, N. J„ linked Ambassa¬
dor Luther witli alleged pro-German
propaganda in a letter which he read
to the committee. Father Gross, a re¬
tired Catholic priest, told how he had
published a pamphlet entitled, “Justice
to Hungary, Germany and Austria.”
Later the committee heard a story
of the nation-wide distribution of Nazi
"propaganda”—some of it allegedly
brought into the United States with¬
out customs Inspection. Evidence was
presented to show that German con¬
suls had encouraged organization of
pro-German clubs to which the “prop¬
aganda” was sent.
Representatives of the State, Post Of¬
fice and Labor departments were In¬
terested listeners to the testimony pro¬
duced, and there were hints of later
deportation proceedings.
■L* T OUIS BARTHOU, foreign minister
of France, appears as the domi¬
nating figure in the negotiations that
may dispel the war clouds hanging
|£*lj^|ggajP
Louis Barthou
preserving order, will not use force to
prevent the return of the Saar basin
to Germany. It also means that the
Germans now have everything to lose
and nothing to gain from a putsch in
the Saar, so the possibility of a clash
in the near future is virtually elimi¬
nated. Of special importance is a
clause that amounts to recognition of
the rights of Jewish and anti-Nazi mi¬
norities in the Saar.
In the disarmament conference in
Geneva M. Barthou has been equally
forceful though not so peaceful in his
doings. He has stood out firmly
against the German demands for arms
equality and has greatly angered Sir
John Simon, British foreign secretary.
In connection with Counsellor Rosen¬
berg of the Soviet embassy In Paris,
Barthou has been forming what is
called an eastern Locarno pact to be
signed by Russia, Rumania, Czecho¬
slovakia, Lithuania, Latvia and Es¬
tonia, with France as its moral guar¬
antor. This would be rather a shock
to Germany and Poland, and the Fran
co-Russian bloc thus formed would
force Great Britain into the back,
ground in matters concerning contl.
nental Europe. To block this scheme
the British would be glad to have th*
arms conference agree on a minimum
program and then adjourn.
Dr. Hans
Luther
over Europe. The
most important thing
he already has ac¬
complished is the en¬
gineering of an ac¬
cord between Franca
and Germany on con¬
ditions for the Saar
plebiscite and setting
the date for that vote
on January 13, 1935.
The agreement gives
assurance that France,
un( j er the pretext of
I GEORGIA NEWS
Happenings Over
The State
Total registration at the University
of Georgia reached 2,202 this year, a
new high mark.
The McConnell Interests, operators
of a chain of 10-cent stores in Geor¬
gia, opened a store at Cartersville
recently.
An official communication from
FERA headquarters recently assured
Valdosta that work would be resumed
on the airport in the near future.
Organization of a state corn-hog
control association will be consum¬
mated at Tifton, and later an allot¬
ment committee will check contracts.
Hail as large as hen eggs fell at
Turnerville recently, and much dam¬
age was done to the gardens. In soma
sections the young plants were lit¬
erally shredded.
Mrs. Luther Guthrie, of Lawrence
ville is confined to her room as tho
result of having been bitten on the
middle finger of her right hand by
a spreading adder.
Seventeen of the nineteen young
men graduated from the school of for¬
estry at the University of Georgia
have already secured jobs. Forestry
graduates are in demand.
Wades Baptist church, located at
Cooperville, near Dover, in Screven
county recently observed the one hun¬
dredth anniversary of its constitu¬
tion as an independent church.
Caroline Miller, of Baxley, Georgia’s
newly acclaimed author, winner of the
Pulitzer prize, will be the guest of
honor of the Georgia Press Association
to be held in Savannah, opening on
June 20.
County Agent T. J. Graham has
received checks totaling $13,500 for
Whitfield county farmers, which is a
part of the cotton rental money duo
on contracts signed by farmers of
that county.
Plans to hold a meeting of the
Sixth District Press Association in
Milledgeville June 8 were postponed
| until after the meeting of the State
| Press Association in Savannah be¬
ginning June 20.
With the time for filing application
! for postmastership having arrived in
' Athens, thirteen candidates are seek¬
ing to replace Postmaster Paul Smith,
who retires July 1. In the group are
three women and ten men.
A report of the Georgia veterans’
service office shows that $377,192.59
has been paid to Georgia veterans in
11,878 compensation cases handled
through the World War and Spanish
American war division of the office.
A bronze tablet erected in honor
of Col. W. p. Price, noted Georgian,
and founder of the North Georgia
College, was unveiled at Dahlonega
recently in the Price Memorial build¬
ing, as part of the college’s closing
exercises.
The right of the state of Georgia
to provide a lien in its favor against
property of any bank, state or na¬
tional, that accepts public deposits,
was sustained in a decision handed
down recently by the supreme court
of the United States.
Richland has seemingly gone “elec¬
tric,” judging from the heavy de¬
mands upon the local agency of the
power company for electrical refrig
| erators, stoves, fans and other elec¬
trical devices for keeping cool dur¬
ing the summer months.
| Checks the for the rental of cotton acre¬
age to agricultural adjustment ad
i ministration have been received in
Royston and are ready for distribu
: tion to the farmersof Franklin coun
! ty- The checks, representing the first
“half payment,” total $43,000.
Dr. Thomas Franklin Abercrombie,
| chief of the Georgia health service,
I was recently elected president of the
; Conference of State and Provincial
; Health Authorities of North America,
j which, generally speaking, means ev
I erythng from tho Panama canal to tho
j north pole.
The state of Georgia has spent
; $130,000,000 in state, federal and
j last county funds on Its highways in the
i fifteen years, a recapitulation re
; vealed recently. In the year 1919 only
$42,000 was spent, while in 1932 the
peak was reached with expenditures
that year totaling $24,000,000.
Organized for the purpose of ad¬
justing obligations of individual farm¬
ers and aiding them in obtaining re¬
financing from federal agencies, the
state farm debt adjustment commit¬
tee, appointed by Governor Eugene
Talmadge, had its first meeting in
Atlanta recently and laid plans for
appointing county committees to carry
on its work in various counties.
Representatives of the American Le¬
gion and Auxiliary rehabilitation com¬
mittees in Georgia, Florida, North and
South Carolina, Alabama, Louisiana,
and Texas, recently meeting in Sa¬
vannah. unanimously approved the Le¬
gion’s rehabilitation program for the
veterans.
Dedication ceremonies for the new
$10,000 Legion home and community
building being erected in Fitzgerald
by the CWA will take place at Legion
Park in the near future. This build¬
ing will be dedicated to those who
lost theire lives in the world war.
CUPID ON VACATION ?
At least one-half of the marriages
taking place throughout the world to¬
day are not preceded by courtship
or Inspired by mutual love. They
are family alliances arranged by par¬
ents.—London Tit-Bits.
IEVER FELT BETTER
SIIICE SHE LOST 39
POUNDS OF FAT
“Three months ago I started using
Kruschen and weighed 201 lbs. Today
after starting my 4th jar I’ve lost 39
lbs. and am in perfect
condition — really 1
never felt so well.”
Mrs. B. C. Terry,
Tampa, Don’t Fla. fat
stay and
unattractive — n o>t
when it’s so easy and
safe to get rid of dou¬
ble chins, ugly hip-fat
and unbecoming
plumpness build on upper arms—at and increase the same
time up strength vi¬
tality-feel younger and keep free from
and headaches, indigestion, breath. acidity, fatigue
shortness of
ehen Just Salts take a half thing teaspoonful of Krus
first every morning in
a glass of hot water. If not joyfully
satisfied with results of one 85 cent jar
drugstore (lasts 4 weeks) money back from any
the world over. But make
sure you get Kruschen—the SAFE way
to reduce.
End freckles,
blackheads,
blemishes
don’t Say endure good-by to dark, muddy skin
skin blemishes a minute
longer! At bedtime tonight cream your
face and neck with Nadinola Bleaching
Cream—no VS 4. V, Ul1M/ massaging, no rubbing. X UL/ly/XUg.
While you sleep it works wonders and
then day-by-day you see your skin
grow lovelier—until your complexion is
all you long for—creamy-white, satin
smooth, blackheads, flawless—free from freckles,
No disappointments, pimples and blotches.
tested and for no long waiting;
trusted over a genera¬
tion. Try delighted. at our risk—your money back
if not Get a large box of
Nadinola Bleaching Cream at toilet
counters or by mail postpaid, only 50c.
NADINOLA, Paris, Term.
RHEDMATIC ?
Pure Natural Mineral Water
May Help
MILLIONS FIND IT
VERY BENEFICIAL
For over 2,000 years the great min¬
eral waters of the World, given to us
by Mother Nature, have proven them¬
selves very beneficial in the treatment
of "rheumatic” aches and pains, ar¬
thritis, sluggishness, certain stomach
disorders and other chronic ailments.
It has been estimated that Ameri¬
cans alone have spent $100,000,000 a
year in going to the mineral wells
and health resorts of Europe. Over
$1,000,000 of these foreign mineral
waters are imported annually into this
country But to help suffering humanity.
it isn’t necessary to go to Eu¬
rope to find fine natural mineral water.
We have many marvelous mineral
waters in eur own country—many ex¬
cellent health resorts to which you can
go for the mineral water treatment
for “rheumatic” aches and pains.
Most surprising of all, however, is
the fact that today you can make a
natural mineral water in your own
Mme at a tremendous saving in ex¬
pense. For Crazy Water Crystals
bring you, in crystal form, healthful
minerals taken from one of the
world’s fine mineral waters. Just the
natural minerals. Nothing is added.
All you do is add Crazy Water
Crystals to your drinking water, and
you have a great mineral water that
has helped millions to better health
and greater happiness.
A standard size box of Crazy Water
Crystals costs only $1.50 and" is suffi¬
cient for several weeks thorough
# treatment for rheumatic pains. Crazy
Water Co., Mineral Wells, Texas.
Ctormts
are for sale by dealers displaying
the red and green Crazy Water
Crystals sign. Get a box today.
Do you Back PEP?
Ara you ail in, tired and run down?
Will rid you ct
MALARIA
and build you up. Used for 65 years for Chills,
Fever, Malaria end
A General Tonic
SOc and $1.00 At All Druggists
FOOT IRRITATIONS
Blisters, burning cracked skin, itching or
soon relieved and healing
JlesinoL promoted with soothing