Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, AUGUST 7
HEAL SKIN DISEASES
Apply Zemo, Clean, Pene
trating, Antiseptic Liquid
It Is unnecessary for you to suffer
with Eciemi, Blotches, Ringworm.
Rashes and similar skin troubles.
Zemo obtained at any drug store for
35c., or 11.00 for extra large bottle,
and promptly applied will usually
give Instant relief from itching tor
ture. It cleanses and soothes the
akin and heals quickly and effective
ly most skin diseases.
Zemo is a wonderful, penetrating,
disappearing liquid and Js soothing to
the most cfcllcate skin. Get It today
and save all further distress. Zemo
Soap, 25c.—Zemo Ointment, 60c. —
Adv.
FRENCH WOMAN TELLS
HOW TO
BET THIN
Without Diets, Absurd Creams,
Exercises or Reducing Girdles.
' I reduced my own weight 50 pound* in
|rss than 9 week* and at the *ame time
vnarvfiouily improved tny general healib
and appearance with
• new French di§<-or
ery called SAN GUI*
NA. To-day l look,
•cl and feel far
younger than my real
mgr From the result*
in my own caae, and
ihoae of my friends
1 am absolutely con
vinced that any rnan
t»r woman burdened
with roll* of ugly,
injurioua, unwhole
some fat. can take it
of! easily, quickly
and safely with
&ANGRI NA. SAN
CRI NA ia one of
•he latest French
eiisrovertea for the re
Auction of excess fat
It does away with
weakening diets
tiresome exercise*
—torturing garments
mnd absurd and egg
pensive so-called re
during creams. It is
waed extensively in
Parts, where women
of every age pride
themselvea on Keep
ing their figures slen
d ,r and gr». rful. No
nutter flow f»t you are, or whit you h»v«
<Jone in the pitt to reduce, you must r«-
rermber that SAN GUI NA hi* never
l»een offered before to the American rub
„lir~lT IS GUARANTEED ABSOLUTE
LY HARMLESS—doc* not contain any
dangerous drug* and cannot possibly aflert
your atomach or your health. By simply
taking 2 amall tablet* before each meal.
I last SO pound* in 2 nsnttia. atd I
haven't regained a pound ainre. I eat all
1 want and enjoy the beat of health. You
can do the aame. To day po to any good
drug store, aak for a packape of SAN
(»RI NA. Do not accept anything el*e
AS IT IS THE ONLY THtNC 1 rvrr
L'und to rrduc,. liter I had tried hull
dJ*ds ol dificreut way* ami remcdiet.
Nan-Orl-Na fa now on sale st
Howard's. Goetchlui Bros., and
3>and Drujr Store*.
While Satan
Smiled
I JURINO h.‘r amire eighteen yearn, Helen
Grant had known only the conventional,
routine sxiatsnca of the average giil in the
average amall town. So when chance made
poaaible a visit to New York, she took with
her, hesidas her youth and beauty, a passion
ate desire to "see something of life.** The
glitteting lights, th# intoxicating music, the
joyous dancing, the whirl of gaiety and plea
sure would, the felt, be like wine to her
thirsty soul.
Had she known, when the sought her ftrat
glimpse into thet fascinating whirlpool of
Broadway 'a night life, wherethe broad, white,
da riling trail wen to lead!
But in her feverish search for excitement
in her light hearted, care-free pursuit of a
Other Amazing Stories from Life
Htrt art Jail a Ftw of tht RrmarkakU Ftalartt in tht Srpltmhtr luut of Trot Story Maga.-in,
"CutttnK Loose" -Whin Gordon proposed “Llf* l» Thai Way” Tha little French
maniagr to Nancy Berwick, ha knaw that
aha had bean pattad, pamparad and apoilad
alt har life. But ha did not dream that monay
—ot lack of it -could avar thraatan hia home
and happinaaa. You must raad tha atoty aa
Cordon himaalf lalla it. It la not a pratty atory
but it carriaa a massage that avary paraon,
tnairiail na niimaatla.l ..nil
married or unmarried, will
do wall to heed.
“The Soul of La Luka**
An outcast! Daapiaed by
mankind, ahunnad by tha
pure of her own aex. or
der ad from her own home—
all aha had -put aboard
a arrange vessel. to be
dropped —any where. Read
the atory of La Luiaa, tha
outcaat. It ia gripping. pa
thttic, yet a moat inspiring
true-lil* narrative.
“The Snake Woman’*
—That’* what theyVallad
har —and that’s what aha
vat thia dark-eyed Slavic
beauty who** aoul found*
strange affinity witji
th* sleek, coiling crea
ture* whoa# fangs secreted
instant death. Little she
knew the part theseatrange
pete were toplay in her com
inf etruggle with the green
eyed monitff, Jealousy.
Irue Starv
c Maqmine f
A Macfaddcn Publication
September Issue Now on Sale W,#
A delightful monthly journey to lha land of love and romance awaits
you in Drum World —th, magatine of beautiful Nonas. A single
copy will make you a regulei icadar. Out tha 15th of tha month —25 c.
Dream World
A Macfaddcn Publication
ifiWRECR
/©1924 * Uy NEA Service Inc
BEGIN HERE TODAY
Sally Morgan has to go 35
miles from her fathers ranch to
catch a train for the east. Sher
iff Bob Wells, her fiance, ia un
able to ride with her to the eta
ation. So the "Nervous Wreck,'
an eccentric young easterner vis
iting at the ranch, offers to lake
her in his little automobile.
The sheriff ridicules the sug
gestion, but Sslly and the Wreck
aet out anyhow over the rough,
uncertain trail. Running out of
gasoline, the Wreck is refused a
loan of five gallons by the occu
pants of s passing car. The
Wreck holds thsm up at the
point of e gun, forcibly takes
the five gallons and leaves them
with the same amount after let
ting the air out of their tires.
To cap the climax, the Wreck
makes ths largo man in the car
crank hia machine before start
ing out.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
He reached over, threw the switch
and the engine was off with a nlght-
Hpllttlng clatter. The big man stag
gered wearily toward the side of the
road. JIIh gait WftH accelerated when
a mud guard nudged hint roughly
aa the flivver spraijg Into life. They
heard him ahout something; It
Hounded like a threat, although they
Could not catch the words. Then
the Wreek took a solid grip on the
wheel and began to drive.
Onrii Ballv looked behind her. Thu
headlights of the motionless ear had
faded to small points. She glanced
at the Wreck. It was not possible
to see his face clearly, but. she
could imagine the expression. Ho
would ebe gritting ills teeth and
staring truculently nt the road,
quite In his glory. It was five min
utes before she spoke, and then she
cut loose,
"You've done It now!" she ex
claimed. "You sure have fixed the
pair of us this time. Have you
gone stark mad?”
"Don't argue," advised the Wreck.
•'Don’t you know what you've
done? lK>n't you renllzn anything?
Do you think you can get away with
a thing like that? Why, you've
committed a crime! And If they
catch us—" f
Fite left the sentence unfinished!
for it was leading to tilings too aw
iul for contemplation.
"Who lu blazes Is going to catch
US'”' he demanded, "They won't.
It'll lake them half nn hour to blow
up those tires, and they'll burn pret.
tv nearly a gallon of gas doing it.
That'll leave them shout four gal
lons. and after flfledp miles or so
they'll go dead, like we were. Don't
you worry about pelting caught.”
Hally shook bur head in despair.
"Why we'll he caught before day
light."
“good tima”—aha failed to forsee tha haarl
ache, tha Borrow, the humiliation and bittar
tears that ware to attend har final awakening
to the Truth about lifa.
Every year, from tha ‘'Main Streets" of
America, come thausanda of these pretty, In
nocent moths to be utterly consumed In the
danling, fierce, lure of every big city. The
gutters, the hospitals, the insane asylums,
the morgues, are all full of tham.
In her own atorv, entitled "Haste Doesn't
Pay.” which appears in True Story Maga
«mo for September, Helen Grant (of course
this is not her real name) bra' aly bares her
Innermost soul, and reveals there the ugly
scars of her hitter experience. It is a story
that will stir you deeply.
miss, Marie, loved her American soldier
sweetheart ao much that aha thought she
could he happy w ith him anywhere. But ae
eoon aa tha novelty had worn off. a longing
for the gay times aha had known in far-away
France gripped her like a fever. In thla atory,
Maria (rankly tails of the terrible mistake alia
Annutl S2OOO Prise Slery Coaplrtr in
Thu Issae of Tree Story M«|uiae
Thla 1074 prise of S2OOO h«* b*fn
•w«r4*d te tha * rites * i Me* u ■
I 1 'which appear* eonq eta in t •
September taaue of Trua Storv M«««-
•tn# Thi# t rue-lifa atory of M*rv Cain,
immigrant, hea crowdad into it more
startling, heart gripping dramatic
apiaodaa than usually fall to tha lot
of womankind
From that moment whan, within
•igtit of New Yt»fh > amt r * terrible
e*p!oelon in tha ship a boiler room,
wit hit* aftermath of tarror.rhao* ana
death, through the many eufreedmg
monit-e whan it teemed that all tha
ruthleea, powarful torcea in the g»*at
city had rqenhmed to cru*h tha haart
and eoul out of haT—the atorv of thia
poor ignorant, dated little creature *
terrllti battle for happineaa will move
you aa nothing you have aver read
Tha atory of Mary Cain may laave
you ahockad and aatoundad that such
conditions In America could rdti
Itut if it does no more than enlighten
pa lent a and young peopleofthedamn
able agencies at work to ruin young
• eu’.e end blast young lives it will
have aervod its purpose and will well
deserve tha t/tVO award It has won.
STEVE'S PUCE, DISTRIBUTOR, 1140 BROAD ST.
"Bet you five dollars."
“Tomorrow, anyway," she went
on. Ignoring his challenge. "And
they'll have a perfectly good case
against us. You held them up with
a gun—my gun.”-
"They ought to have been held
up. They had it coming to them
They ought to have been shot full
of bullets," said the Wreck, fierce
ly.
Hally was angry, hut of course he
could not see that. She sat with her
fists clenched and her lips set tight.
The silver went on steadily thru
the night. >
CHATJTER VI
An Aet of Providence
Tt. was after sun-up when he
aroused her by a touch on the arm.
Hally's eyes blinked rapidly as she
straightened In the scat. The flivver
was moving along at a slow pace,
intended to promote the comfort
of a sleeping passenger.
"’Morning," said the Wreck. "Sor
ry to wake you, but I wanted your
expert opinion."
'"Morning." yawned Sally; then
shook herself Into full wakefulness
and Inspected him. "Have you been
driving all night?"
It he had, she was prepared to
acknowledge a tremendous respect
for his endurance, for he was not
flying any signals of weariness. Hut
he shook his head with a grin.
"1 stopped for a while, after you
got. asleep. I didn’t need any sleep;
I Just can't sleep. Hut I let the
Summer Hints
for Young Mothers
The Child Who
Won’t Play
Healthy children love to romp In
summer from early morn until the
hint call, and If n youngster mopes
ahout the house and looks yellow
ish, you may know It Isn't well.
Think over the little one's diet.
It should he watched more careful
ly In summer. Too much heavy or
raw food causes biliousness and In
digestion.
Usually a thorough cleansing
with Llv-o-Lnx nnd a little better
sense about the food will straight
en out the child quickly. Ltv-o-lax
is a vegetable laxative that works
on the liver, too.
IJv-o-lax Is easy to take. Chil
dren like It. You can get a good
slzgd bottle at the drug storo for
30c.
mada in a moment of reck
lessness.
Alan Appearing in
Saptambar Trua Storyt
“Judgment”
"Through Fire”
"Thai Brat of Mabel's”
"Proving Her Cat.”
"Two Women”
“Board and Lodging”
True Story Accepts
the Challenge
Today, with a brutal cal-
Inuanasa the powerful
forcea of ain ara challeng
ing the very existence of
every moral standard,
every sacred tradition.
Touproot and destroy our
long jealously-guarded In
stitutions of marriage and
lha home; to w reck young
lives—to blast young souls
—tocnish every traced the
N ■ more leecinatmg etonee are being written then thoce which appear
,tch month In Ttua Romances —tha stater publication to True Story
Magesine. Your naw satand baa it. OuttheJJrdot the month — 2sc.
True Romances
A Macfaddcn Publication
engine cool out. There wasn't any
hurry, anyhmow.
"Noboddy passed us?" She asked
It ansiously.
The Wreck shook his head and
laughed. He was in fine spirits for
a man with guilt on his soul.
"What I wanted to ask you about
was this wire fence,” he said.
"We've been following it for a
couple of miles. What's it ntean?"
Hally inspected the sense. which
followed the line of the road.
"It's somebody's wire, of course.”
she answered. "It means there must
be a ranch around somewhere.”
"Do they have breakfast at
ranches?”
"They better had!"
"My ides, too*” he said. “Where
abouts would this ranch lie, reckon
ing without the aid of any moun-
Now We Know Why
People Have
Diming
Fee!
All in the Joints says
Maine Doctor
"What fools we mortals be.”
All these years we have been try
ing to help thousands of footstore
people by bathing and powdering
the skin when all the time the real
trouble is in the bones, ligaments
and cartilage—
Or, to be short, in the Joints.
There are 36 hones in the foot
covered with cartilage and con
nected with ligaments and they
have a tremendous amount of work
to do.
The slightest strain cm one little
ligament from being "on the foot”
too much inflames the whole foot,
causing soreness and burning,
aching and general misery.
"All this ran lie quickly proved,"
says a prominent Maine doctor
whose name is knowijgithe world
over.
Just try a remedy that is com
pounded for Joint troubles only—•
such as Joint-Ease, which* every
druggist carries, and see how
quickly your sore, tired, inflamed
and tortured feet will get well and
strong and sturdy again.
Forget you powdering and soak
ing ami other makeshifts for just
a few days and get rid of all foot
misery by using Joint-Ease.
It's an active emollient that you
rub on with your fingers for about
a m.inute and it soaks right. In
through skin and flesh away down
to the Joints —the real seat of all
troubler.
And remember when Joint-Ease
gets ill all foot agony gets out —
quick—A tube for 60 cents—
Every drug store.
Howard Drug Company and Land
Drug Company sells lots of Joint-
Ease.—Advertisement.
tnridt I mm Urgttad •>'
aa, i.'vflu 7Ho «»t«.S 4A,» avutrmgnu' it d.I
fjr.MS *t+d m* Mi hud (Mil f«i 4 U’k'4 t fiilMK*
.4*l*-* »tmamhf ft,it Kir it hif/mu, hut tht V| u ***•
thing I bwr>" frmm ' H*tt§
Vi"in bw J*w» W</juai fur Sgfttmhr.
gpiritual in a mad, world-wide orgy of sensual pleasure arul
wantonness—thia is tha end and aim of the forces opposed
to Right, to Good, to pure love and true human happiness.
With the Sword of Truth as hts weapon, Bernarr Mnc
faddtn,founder and aditor ofTrueStoiy MagatinehasboUlly
taken the aggreasi ve without fear of consequences or thought
of retreat. Through the pages of True Story Magazire, he
ha* hurled the great truths about life, its snarec, traps,
temptation* and pitfalls, far and near into every corner of
tht land. His success io best attested by True Story’s aver,
growing raader-audienct of millions. True Srorv is win
ning the battle.
U»e Thia Coupon If You Cannot Get
True Story At Your Newsstand
—CUT ON POTTED LINE-
Special Opportunity C oupon
, SEND NO MONEY NOW
Mail s*rrkf o«Mrlra«ni
I TRUF STORY MAGAZINE
•4th Street and Broadway. New York Cite
Dear# reter name on yom m»'l ng tint to recair* Trur P*rrv
Miculn# for one »ear Martina with Srpt«trt;wr iaaue an.! kill tv- a?
yeer apectal rnc* of 13 t*' 1 reatrre tb* ngbt to can,-*’ in p>ue i am
«x*t rnUrtlj aatiafWd.
stivsl .
i- - I-,,
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA,
tains or other visible landmarks?”]
That brought a smile to her face. I
Plainly, the Wreck was in excellent j
fettle this morning. He was dispos
ed to be almost playful.
•Td say it’s on the same side of J
the road as the fence." replied Sally.
"And if we haven’t passed any gate
yet, we'd better keep on until we
hit one. There's sure to be one.”
He nodded and continued to drive
while Sally studied the country. It
was not mountainous, but decided
ly hillv, and she knew at a glance
that It must lie at a considerable
distance from the Rar-M.
Presently her thoughts returned
to the big car and its passengers,
and sfie caught herself looking
backward over the roiling road,
wondering what had become of
them.
"Here's a gate,” said the Wreck.
There was more than a gate.
There was a plain roqd, running
under it and off into the hills be
yond. Without waiting for a con
sultation, he climbed down, opened
the gate, then drove the flivvcH
through. He wts going straight
ahead when Sally stopped him.
"Always close the gates after you
out in this country." she said,
jumping out. "They're put there
for a reason. Cattle.”
i
"I was In a hurry for breakfast,” |
he explained.
The private road was a long one,
as Sally judged it would be; she
knew something about the size of
ranches. It was nearly a quarter of
an hour before they came within
sight of anything but hills and hol
lows.
Then the ranch buildings flashed
abruptly Into view as the road,
emerged from a patch of young I
spruce. Sally studied the picture I
with a professional eye. The ranch
house, the stables, the outbuildings,
the corrals, all classified them
selves swiftly under her survey.
"That’s a pretty big house,” she
commented. “Looks sort of new, too.
They’ve got a nice location. See the
way those hills rise, off yonder,
back of the house. Pretty, isn’t it?"
"I can't see anything but bacon
and eggs," said the Wreck.
“And when they ask questions,
we're a couple of .tourists. Don’t
forget that," said Sally, significant
ly. "I’m supposed to be a dude, too."
The flivver came to a stop in the
dooryard, just as a man emerged
from the house. He was a tall, lean
man, with scraggy mustache, and
he stood studying the mfor several
seconds, In evident surprise, before
he approached.
“Good morning," called Sally,
with a wave of her hand.
Siii-
SALLY WHIRLED ABOUT HER
CHEEKS SUDDENLY PINK.
“ ‘Mornln’, ma'am.”
As he walked over to the car ho
was -still scrutinizing them with a
pair of steady blue eyes.
"Are you the proprietor?” Inquir
ed Sally.
She knew better than that, but
she was trying to play a,part.
“I'm the foreman, mu'anr."
“Oh! Well, I'm sure you're the
very person I want to see. Can we
get breakfast?"
The foreman vubbed his chin and
gave her a further appraisal.
“It sort of depends,” he said.
“Can you cook?”
“Yes." It was a chorus from two
in the sliver.
1' °r a few seconds the foreman
transferred ills gaze ro the Wreck,
who seemed to haeve acquired sud
den interest in his eyes.
“It happens, ma'am, that we ain’t
furnished with a cook. We had a
Chinee, and a Chinee helper. But
they blew on us yesterday. But
there's plenty of grnh, and if you
want to cook it. help yourself."
He waved a hand In the direction
of the kitchen. There was a scram
bling exodus from the flivver. The
Wreck beat her to the kitchen door
by a couple of yards. The foreman
followed.
“ill show*you where everything
is.” lie said. "Tell you the truth,
I'm kind of hungry myself. The boys
had to rustle their own breakfast
this morning’, and they didn't make
out none too well. 1 et some of it,
and I know what I’m talkin' about.
No if you don't mind, ma'am, while
you're rookin' up something, make
It liberal In quantity. My name's
Charley McSwecn."
"My name's Williams." ..
Wreck, taking ,he hint * hp
The foreman shook hands and
glanced In the direction of gtallv
who was already clearing a place
on the stove.
"My wife.'' said the Wreck.
“Pleased to know you. Mis' Wil
liams."
Bally had whirled about, her
checks suddenly pink Nhe shot an
amazed glance at Henry Williams
and received a look of warning in
return. Charley McHween laughed.
“I've seen honeymooners before/'
he said. “I was married once mv
self. It ain't nothin' against any
body.**
Sally opened her lips to say some
thing broke into a queer lough and
turned to the stove again.
It was the kind of breakfast that
comes once in a long, long time,
when you are ready for even the
meanest nnd find yourself sitting
dotfn t« the best. The Wreck ate
with a concentration that was ap
palling. Even the foreman, who was
accustomed to all sorts of appetites,
watched with an admiring eye Sal
ly and the Wreck were still eating
when Charley McSween pushed
hack his chatr.
"I'm savin' that was a regular
breakfast." he declared as he wiped
his mouth. "The lady sure knows
j how to fry hact'n. I kind of like to
have my eggs flopped over; hut
that * nothin' against her, because
1 didn't say so. Coffee was A-l. I
can't say as 1 usually eat toast, but
I‘ve got no objections to It. Can you
make biscuits, ma'am?”
(Continued in Our Next 1,t0e,)
•
Th* * hole of the eraln nev*r work*
at op# Urn*. It operate* alternately
In halve*.
There la an earthquake - about
once a week In the city of Lima.
Peru.
Nc Matter Where You Buy
McElwee & Gerald's Prices Are Lower
Friday and Saturday Specials
NOVELTY WASH GOODS
HIGH IN QUALITY—BUT AT BARGAIN PRICES
Silhouette Voiles, Fawn Voiles, Schiffle Voiles, »Printed Voiles,
Fancy Swiss, Embroidered Voiles, Flock Dot Voiles, in a bewilder-
Ing assortment of colors, combinations and printed patterns,
worth up to $1.50. Thousands of yards to select from in this sale, J
yard
STOCK
SILK DRESSES
AT REDUCED PRICES
Drastic price reductions have been made on every silk dress in the house.
Prices have been brought right down to a low figure you cannot resist.
A big lot formerly up to $29.50, in this sale at a flat price SIO.OO
TURKISH TOWELS
TURKISH FACE TOWELS-14i/>x27.
Just the towel you want for every
day use. An excellent 19c value.
Clearance Sale, 1 70l
the dozen
TURKISH BATH TOWELS—23x4S,
a very heavy double thread Turkish
Bath Towel, the kind that all good
housekeepers love to own, A Q
75c value, sale, each T’l/C
16x32 Cannon Bath Towels, QA
heavy quality, 4 for i/LIC
DOMESTICS
36ineh Bleached Domestic, heavy
quality, 5 yards 90c
CHILDREN’S SOX
An exceptional value offered in plain
and fancy top sox for children. A reg
ular size assortment now. QA
Come early; 4 pairs for. ... C
John P. King Sea Island “g AA
36 inches, 12 yards for *P 1 «LpU
Parabola Gold Eyed g?
Needles, at OC
McELWEE & GERALD
866 BROAD STREET
SPRINGFIELD CHURCH
To Observe 137 Anniversary
August 10 th
(Written for The Herald)
Springfield Baptifct church, corner
12th and Reynolds streets, will cele
brate Its 137th anniversary, Sunday,
August 10th. Rev. \V. P. Sanders,
pastor of this old historic church,
with his staff of officers have left no
stone unturned to make this occasion
one of the grandest in the history of
the church.
During the long number of years
this old church has been in exist
ence, it has had only ten ministers.
Rev. W. P. Sanders, making the
tenth pastor. Its membership con
sists of some of the best colored citi
zens of this community. The church
is in a very fine condition, having a
modem brick building with a seating
capacity of two thousand, a large
wooden building in the rear that is
used for social gatherings and a par
te jingo of eight rooms wnich is oc
cupied by the pastor.
A spet lal program has been ar
ranged for Sunday, as follows;
Sunrise prayer meeting, led by the
deacons; Sunday school at 10 a. m.,
and at 11:30 a. m.. the anniversary
sermon will be preached by Rev. I. J.
Yancy, former pastor of Gumming
Grove Baptist church; remarks by
Rev. James M. Nabrit. pastor of
Mount Olive Baptist church, Atlanta,
and president of the State Baptist
convention.
At 2 p. m.. dinner will be served in
the old building All members are
requested to bring their baskets with
them and the trustees will furnish
lemonade free.
At 3 p. m., Rev. W. B. L. Clarke,
pastor of Bethel A. M. K church,
will preaeh; his choir Rnd congre
gation will have charge of the after
noon service. A special program has
been arranged for the night services
fby the B. Y. P. U. which will com
mence at 7:30 p. m. At 8:15 P- m.
there will be preaching by the pastor.
Enfh member and frit-nd of this old
church is asked to give a penny a
year for each year the church is old.
The pastor, officers and members,
take this method to thank the friends
who helped to make the "anniversary
trip around the world" on August sth.
a success, for the cars loaned nnd
'heir liberal patronage.
BRITISH CLERGYMEN
Defend Alcohol on Christian
Grounds
LONDON Amvrira i* being
used as the horrible example by
the English antt-prohibUionists in
their Increasing frequent meeting
over England
The Rey. Wvndham Heathcote,
of Maidstone, recently addressed a
Soft Glossy flair
f' ’ r ~ y
nit®# KERCLIN
Pomade Hair
'u wait*qr afe-ry c a n. Be j da- ‘
Mflßn mSttttt of Heroin product
fUrolin Medicine Co,
Georgia j
WASH SILKS, SI.OO
36-inch Washable Silk in all the sport
and underwear shades, (I* 1
$1.50 value, yard V A • Lrvr
PONGEE 90c
32-inch 12 Mommie Pongee in natural
only. Regular $1.25 value, QA
yard %/*JC
WOMEN’S UNDERVESTS
Summer weight Lisle Undervests for
women. Color, white. Made of good
quality mercerized lisle that QA
washes nicely, 3 for I/v/C
OIL CLOTH, 29c YARD
5-4 white and fancy Oil Cloth for
kitchen and lunch tables, good qual
ity. Worth regular 40c, AA
sale, yard C
BED SPREADS, $2.49 Each
and a spread that is easily laundered
and requires no ironing. $3.00 reg
81x90 Krinkle Bed Spread, plain hem
ular, clearance sale, d*o A Q
price *J
meeting nt the Corn Exchange,
during which he described the
working of the Illicit drink traffic
in the United States as he observed
it on a recent trip. He produced
canes, dummy books and even a
cigar capable of carrying small
quantities of liquor which he stated
were used, with many other novel
ties, in a continual if unlawful ser
vice. America under prohibition,
he declared, had become a more
corrupt, more crirAinal and drunken
nation.
The speaker said he opposed pro
hibition because it was subversive
to democracy and was opposed to
Christianity. The democracy in
him, he said, was too strong to al
low him to compel his neighbor to
do what he did not want to do in
the conduct of his private
There were some matters with
which neither governments nor
majorities had anything to do
whatever. They had no right, he
maintained to interfere wtih the
way in which the individuals wor
shipped: no right to dictate the
choice of the woman a man should
marry, and no right to order what
should be eaten or drunk. In re
gard to religion he challenged any
Christian to tell him that wine
was wrong when Christ drank nnd
blessed it.
Dr. H. H. Henson, the Bishop of
Durham, is another opponent of
prohibition and is of the opinion
that “coercion is not a legitimate
method of advancing morality."
Speaking at a recent Rotary Club
meeting here he said:
“We are told we ought to iden
tify the drinking of alcoholic bever
ages with an immoral act. As a
moderate drinker from my youth
up. and intending so to continue
until the end, I passionately re
pudiate that. It is a pervision of
the truth to identify the temperate
DRUGGISTS SAY THEY
HAVE NEVER SEEN
ANYTHING LIKE G.F.P.
Nothing But Appreciation
and Gratitude Expressed
by Women Who Use It
f In the south alone. It la rafe to aay,
that more than a hundred thousand
girls and women are using and prais
ing (1 F p And at the rate the sale
of this medicine Is increasing every
day. it won't be long before it will he
known and used In every home, by
rich and poor alike.
Druggists aay that wher* one bottle
1* sold in a neighborhood. It Is net
long before many more are sold there
when the women Wrn about the won
derful things It does.
Many women who have used O F.
P say that It keen* them free from
cold*, courhs and throat trouble*, .too.
Tha* Is the beat indication that the
"tntement of tjie discoverers about Ita
uru*u;»! merit in ridding th* ®v*tem
of the dreaded maladv—oatarrh. 1* he.
•ng 1 erne out. Few women realize
that fnt.irrh is the thing which saps
ihe vitality which the r generative nr
| I’M re need to nerform their normal
| fun 'Mops And when they rannot
do this. nain. w «ft nes* nervoume**.
In** of sleen. no nmwite. Irritability
and dejrtv>nd«*nc'’ result.
o V V shouM be used faithfully,
■’hd hy dome this manv regrets and
week* of mffering and misery can be
n voided.
Women Now Depend o\
i St. Joseph s \
so Restore Their Vitality
use of liquors wlh an immoral ex
cess.
“Prohibition pushes positive law be
yond the proper limitations of per
conal rights. Total abstinence from
alcoholic beverages is no part of
morality, and the moderate use of
alcohol is the tradition of Christen
dom from the example of the Di
vine founder and His Apostles
through all the ages to this mo
ment.”
Kish, the oldest capital of Baby
lonia. is believe to have been found
ed after the flood.
Mosquito
Bites
often infect the blood.' Itching
and all fear of infection ceases if
MOONE’S EMERALD OIL
is applied. To prevent bites
spread a few drops over
exposed parts.
0
DON’T GET
HOMESICK
ON YOUR
VACATION
You might be
having a great time
while you are away
on your vacation,
but to keep from
getting homesick he
s ure you The
•\u?u?ta Herald
*ent to you each
'"bile away,
fust phone our
ru n; , r t_
Phone 20V