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MOTHER!
Clean Child's Bowels with
“California Fig Syrup”
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Even if cross, feverish, bilious, con
stipated or full of cold, children love
the pleasant taste of “California Fig
Syrup.” A teaspoonful mnever fails to
clean the liver and bowels.
Ask your druggist for genuine
#California Fig Syrup” which has di
rections for babies and children of all
ages printed on bottle. Mother! You
must say “California” or you mdy get
an imitation fig syrup. :
Greatness
“Greatness,” said Hi Ho, the sage
of Chinatown, “consists less in deeds
than in deft appeal to public imagl
nation,”—Washington Star,
Small favors are always thankfully
received, but often unthankfully re
membered,
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\&\\l AR T -
- Sours
Lots of folks who think they have
“indigestion” have only an acid condi
tion which could be corrected in five
or ten minutes. An effective anti-acid
like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon
restores digestion to mnormal,
Phillips does away with all that
sourness and gas right after meals, It
prevents the distress so apt to occur
two hours after eating, What a pleas
ant preparation to take! And how
good it is for the system! Unlike &
burning dose of soda—which is but
temporary relief at best—Phillips
Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many
times its volume in acid.
Next time a hearty meal, or too rich
a diet has brought on the least dis
comfort, try—
PHILLIPS
& Milk |
of Magnesia
RELIEF FROM Pl LE s
ITCHING
is so quick when-PAZO OINTMENT is
applied, it will surprise you, Druggists
are keenly interested in the remedy and
are recommending it to their customers.
Askgour Druggist about PAZO OINT
MENT. In tubes with pile pipe, 76¢; or
in tin box, 60c, :
Malaria in the Blood *
GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL
TONIC destmfrs the malarial
gfirmp in the blood and removes
t! eim‘?untles. It restores Energy
and Vitality by creatinlg new
healthy blood and fortifies the
system agamat Chills. You can
feel its trenlgthem'ng, Invigora
zing (;Efi'ect. t brings Color to
he Cheeks and Improves the
Appetite. Pleasant to take. 60c.
A package of Grove's Liver Pills.is en.
closed with every bottle of GROVE’S
TASTELESS CIHLL TONIC for those
who wish to take a Laxative in connection
with the Tonic. .
THE NEW CRAZE .
CHOCOLATE or PEANUT SUNDAES and
CONES. Made a new way., The_ Chocolate
or other flavors hardens on the Ice, Cream.
it's pure and Nutritious, Serve these at
your next lunch and parties. It's a Treat,
Children go wild over Chocolate Pop Freeze,
Be the first in your town, Full simple di
yections with 25 cent trial package. Chii
dren can make money after school taking
orders, Become agents. Send for 25c¢ pack
age, try it, Be surprised sales you will
malke. Big money, Guerrieri's Ice Cream
gpecialty Co., 7301 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 1.
e ——
Agents Make Over 1009 FProfit ‘Selling Big
vacation packages at sl, Sample package
and agent's price list sent for 60c. C. H.
RUSSELL, Jobber and Dealer, Freeport, Pa.
e
Yearn Dressmaking, i 5 practical lessons in
dressmaking postpaid on receipt of sl, Orig
inaily sold as correspondence course for SSO.
Jos. Brennian Co., 3832 Jasper Bt., Phila., Pa.
e
Satesmen to Sell Coveralls, Motor Coats,
Pants, Jackets, full line work clothes direct
factory to consumer, Most complete line of
fered. Union Joe, Box 359, New Orleans, La.
o
WANTED—Names and addresses of sémnlsh
American war veterans and widows. Service
between April 21, 1898, and July 4, 1902, O.
Anderson, 7 8. Hilliard, Montgomery, Ala.
o medy ¥it for Eczema and
mol, the Remedy of Mel
f&.er ‘skin dls':&n; Sold on a money. back
guarantee. A trial will convince. Samples
free. Zemol Cheinical Co., Fremont, Ohio.
R el
and Grain Investors and Those Con
%fiiung Investing, Stocks and Bonds an
alyzed, Gulde to safe invest, Free Pros
pectus. Raphael Serll, Times Bldg, N. Y.
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By LOUISE M. COMSTOCK
k 4EN Mrs. Herbert Hoover or Mrs. Al
R Smith sets up her :domestic menage
\» ' in the White House next March, she
will do ‘it according to customs estab
lished by 32 predecessors, women of
unusual personalities and talents who
‘ ’ have molded to its present form the
?}5,;4‘,:"!/” glamorous role of First Lady of the
WAy rana.
“\;‘s."'f:,”/,f Love, romance, adventure, success
‘)‘ i',"“\\ and failure have come to them while
/m‘, mistresses of the nation’s first home,
"\ Three of them, Letitia Christian Tyler,
Caroline Scott “Harrison and Ellen
Axson Wilson died theré; three more, Julia
Gardner Tyler, Frances loisom Cleveland and
Edith Galt Wilson, by marrying men already.-in
office, came to the White. House as brides. Only
two of our Presidents were bachelors when
inaugurated, a proportion which shows them to
be no exception to the rest of humanity in this
particular respect. They were James Buchanan
and Grover Cleveland, and Mr. Cleveland remained
single only:a year after his term began. Three
Presidents ‘were widowers when they took the
oath of office and to daughters or sisters fell the
responsibilities of First Lady of the Land. .
Martha Washington, the first to hold this
position, had no White House in which to enter
tain the diplomats and foreign guests of the new
Republie, but the elaborate formality of the recep
tions, levees and musicales held in the temporary
Presidential residence at ‘Philadelphia set a
de?nite social tradition. “Lady” Washington wak
a lvldow when she married the famous general,
the mother of two children, and she brought him
alslOo,ooo estate which helped make him the rich
e{t colonist in his part of the country. She is
described as a quiet, unassuming woman, a good
mother and a charming hostess, who held *court”
with" her idolized husband with ease and grace
in spite of the lavish ceremony the times de
manded. Ve
It was thus to Abigail Smith Adams, wife of
the second President of the United States, that
fell the distinction of being the first mistress of
the White House. She was introduced to her new
abode on a bleak November day in 1800. Behind
her lay a torturous stage-coach journey over the
miles of mud and wilderness which lay between
her and her luxurious Philadelphia home. And
before her—well, read what that staid and¢bril
liant woman wrote her sister a little later:
“I arrived®about one o’clock at this place,
known by the name of the City, and the name is
all you can (;nll so, as I expected to find it a
new country, with houses scattered over a space
of ten miles and trees and stumps in plenty with
a castle of a house—so I found it. The President’s
house is in a beautiful situation, in front of which
is the Potomac. . . . I have been to George
town. . . . It is the dirtiest hole I ever saw
for a place of any trade or respectakility of
inhabitants. . . . 7Z¥is house is twice as large
as our meeting house. I believe the great hall is
as big. I am sure it is twice as long. Cut your
coat according to your ¢loth—but. this house lis
built for ages to come!”
~ Mrs. Adams was compelled to endure embryonic
Washington only three " months, for . President
Jefferson moved in the next March. Jéfferson was*
a widower and affairs at the “Castle” were ordered
by his two daughters and by the'vivaclous and
popular Dolly Madison, at that time wife of the
secretary of state. For 16 years, while Jefferson
and her husband were President, Mrs. Madison
built to colorful dignity the social life of the new
White House; for over 50 years she held undis
puted sway over Washington society. She was
not handsome; it has even been said that, though
brought up in the Quaker faith, she rouged, took
snuff and played cards for high stakes. But, ac
cordingito ore # her -biogrdphers, this daughter
of South Carolina “Is believed,to have made a
greater contribution to the social life of the
country than any other woman who had the honor
of llving in the White House.”
HAZELHURST NEWS
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Though Dolly Madison was twenty-one years
younger than her distinguished husband, they lived
together happily for forty-two years. When he
died at Montpelier, his widow returned to Wash
ington and though then nearly seventy and in
straitened circumstances, she made her little
house opposite Lafayette square, now the home of
the Cosmos club, a magnetic center of social life.
Her death in 1849, when she was seventy-seven,
was mourned by the entire capital.
Her immediate successors, though perhaps less
well known, each left the stamp of her personality
upon the social regime of the White House. There
was Elizabeth Monroe, a quiet, intellectual woman
of stately bearing, and Louisa Johnson Adams,
who, though born abroad, educated in foreign
courts and “a person far beyond the average of
her generation,” was prevented by ill health from
continuing the festivities initiated by Dolly Madi
son. Though Rachel Jackson died, perhaps of a
broken heart, some months before “Old Hickory”
was inaugurated and though she was much
maligned during the stormy campaign which pre
ceded his election, his passionate devotion to her
memory was responsible for momentous events
during his ‘administration, though social life at
the White House was actually in the hands of her
sister-if-law, Mrs: A..J. Donelson. And it was
Angelica - Singleton,. his daughter-in-law and a
charming bella of the South, who presided over
official dinpers. for President Van Buren, a
widower. an
Letitia Tyler, made First Lady of the Land by
theideath of President Hdrrison only a few months
after his induguration, died in the White House.
Président @yler met the woman who. was to be
his second:wyife, Julia Gardner of New York, in
story bevk- fashion. They were brought together
by the death:of her father, whe was killed in an
explosién’ on the Potomac and whose thody was
Seouglit to the White House immediately after the
accident.’ &¥
The brilliant activity with which the new Mrs.
Tyler brought’ her husband’s administration.to a
closé ended abruptly with the entrance of Sarah
Childress Polk, a-beauty of the dark Spanish type
with’a regal manner, whose strict religious beliefs
caused’ her to banish dancing and the serving of
refreshments from White House. functions. Mar
garet Smith Taylor undertook. the duties of First
Lady of ‘the Land reluctantly, resenting the
demands this new honor made upon the husband
she had already seen though the hazards of a
spectacular career as Indian fighter. Conse
quently, so it is said, she sat quietly knitting and
smoking a favorite pipe while her daughter, Mrs.
william Wallace Bliss, saw to the installation of
new lighting fixtures and furniture in the Presi
dential mansion and entertained for her father.
Abigail Powers Fillmore, a self-educated woman
and a school teacher before her marriage, was
another who, this time because of lameness; put
the burden of playing hostess on a daughter. And
Jane Means Pierce éentered the important role
under a ¢loud of grief for the death of her thir
teen-year-old son killed iu a railroad accident,
and though a competent if somewhat detached
hostess, she had such a dislike of politics that
they were never discussed in the President’s home
while she was around!
During the administration of the bachelor Pres
ident, James Buchanan, his ravishing niéce, Har
riet Lane Johnston, one of the most beautiful and
popular of the women who have held that posi
tion, played First Lady of the Land and brought
to the historic mansion once again a period of
high festivity. Then came Mary Todd Lincoln,
“a pleasant-faced, cheerful woman, who would be
satisfactory in her place,” whose life at the Cap
ital, darkened by the death of her son Willie
and the President’s assassination, could not have
been a very happy cone. Her successor, Eliza
McCardle Johnson, though she taught her husband
to read and write, was an invalid while she
lived in Washington and was forced to relinquish
the duties of her exalted position to a daughter.
A new social era, as well as new furniture and
decorations, entéred the White House when Julia
Dent Grant became its mistress. A talent for
entertaining and unfailing energy enabled her to
promote a continuous round of gala functions,
among them the brilliant marriage of her daugh
ter Nellie, one of her four children. Lucy Webb
Hayes, also an excellent hostess, modified the
nature of White House entertainment by banish
ing the serving of intoxicating liquors. And the
custom of lavish and eflicient entertainment estab
lished by these two was ably continued by Mrs.
John E. Mcl_glroy. gister of President Arthur, and
successor to Lucretia Garfield, whose term as
First Lady was cut short by her husband’s assas
sination.. .. - :
Though President Cleveland entered otpce a
bachelor, his marriage to Francis Folsom "soon
after gave Washington one of the most popular
hostesses it has ever known. The young Mrs.
Cleveland was thé idol of the women of her gen
eration, many of whom still remember the dresses
she wore at her famous public receptions. Caro
line Scott Harrison, an unusual woman, skilled in
painting and music and the first president general
of the Daughters of the American Revolution, died
in the White House, leaving her responsibilities to
a daughter, Mrs. McKee, ** L
At the close of President McKinley's admin
istration, a quiet one socially, due to the ill health
of his wife, Ida Saxton McKinley, Edith Carow
Roosevelt, anothér woman still .fondly remem
bered, became First Lady of the Land. She was
an engaging, intelligent person, keenly interested
in the activities of her famous husband and sich
a devoted mother to her five children that she
has been called the “American Cornelia.” The
best remembered occasion of her life in the his
toric mansion is the marriage of Alice Roosevelt
to Nicholas® Longworth, present speaker of the
house. { ’
With Helen Herron Taft, the new interests of
modern woman were introduced into the White
House. Mrs. Taft was active in eivic enterprise
and was the founder of the Cincinnati Symphony
orchestra. Her successor, Edith Axson Wilson,
died during her husband's first term in office and
was followed by Edith Galt Wilson, mistress of
the nation’s first home during the troublesome
times of the World war. Florence Kling Harding
was again a modern woman with modern ideas,
being the first President's wife with the power
to vote.
To the demands of a most elaborate social pro
gram Grace Goodhue Coolidge, who after seven
years as First Lady of the Land yields her posi
tion .next March, has lent a charm and tact that
have endeared her to the American people. She is
a graduate of the University of Vermont and
before her marriage taught in a school for the
deaf in Northampton. Through the death of one
of her two.sons, Calgin, Jr.,-the iong illriess: of
her mother and the déath of her husband's father,
through wearing ‘years. of continuous publicify,
she’ has miintained @-calm, gracious dignity, and
been always a true First Lady of the Land. .
‘lt:May Be
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When your -
Children Cry
Castoria is a comfort when Baby is
fretful. No sooner taken than the little
one is at ease, If restless, a few drops
soon bring eontentment. No harm done,
for Castoria is a baby remedy, meant
for bables. Perfectly safe to give the
youngest infant; you have the doctors’
word for that! It is a vegetable pro
duct and you could use it every day.
But it’s in an emergency that Castoria
means most, Some night when consti
pation must be relieved—or colic pains
—or other suffering. Never be without
it; some mothers keep an extra bottle,
unopened, to make sure there will al
ways be Castoria in the house, It is
effective for older children, too; read
the book that comes with it,
CASTORIA
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
Since 1846 Has Healed Wounds and
- Sores'on Man and Beast
Money back for first bottle mnot suited. Alldealers.
A
Going Fishing
" “I have my nets and my tackle all
ready.” S
“Why the. shotgun?”
“We might sight a few flying fish.”
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A New Exterminator thatis
Wonderfully Effective yet Safe to Usel
‘lfe-.R-O ii" rel%tivkelyd ba.nnlestu. to hglm;;
ings, livestoc ogs, cats, po
yet.nl“n quaxanteed to Ignll fats‘and mice
every time. ‘
Avoid Dangerous Poisons
:K-R-0 does not contain arsenic, phos-
Ehorua. barium carbonate or awtbfl
eadly poison. Itg active ingredient is
squill as recommended by the U. S.
De&uof Agricultaire in their latest bule
fetin on ' Rat Control."] !
Many letters testify to the great merit
of K-R-0.
#'One of ous customers purchased a can ot
ee v tnser icked up 42
d::‘fl;,u.—!iayl Pbamacy.g’huadelphh.
SOLD ONMONEY.BACK CUAR
ANTEE. 75cat your drggouotduect
from us at SI.OO delivered. Large size
:four t"'mes as much) $2.00. The K-R-O
D ny, Springfi¢ld, Ohio.
1BD)
K-R-=
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KILL3-RATS-ONLY
Jungle Diving Beauty
Teacher (exhibiting a picture of &
zebra)-—What is this?
Pupil—A horse in his bathing suit.
Mrs. Steele Says of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Pratt, W. Va.—“l was so weak
and nervous that I was in bed most
‘all the time and
couldn’t sit up
and I am onl{
30 years old.
:gw.v your adver
ising in a -
azine and a.fz:gl'
had taken three
doses of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vege
table Comfoud
I could feel that
I was better. Af
ter ta.king_ two
e
e
£ i
% F
bottles I began doing my work and
I feel like a new woman. I recom
' mend “théi+Vegetable Compound to
my friends and say it will do all it
claims to dg.and more. I will gladly
answer all”letters I recive.”—Mgß.
S. E. StesLE, Pratt, W. Va.
SORE EYES Z.5%%%x
Eye Lotion
relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyes in 24 to 48
ot i or Gk, AP Bl
trom Beform Dispensary. P. . Box 161, Atianis, Ga,
Cleaning and Dyeing Plant. One - f the best
known In Sacramento, Large prosperous
business. $12,000 required. Western Brok
erage, 1612 W. Pico, Los Angeles, Calif,
[B, 0B Y.
BLEACH
Wonderfn) apd 5l? ks
K m:;a?-n. g'iga $1.25, W
mam_ wiite
Or. C. . Berry Michigan Ave., Chicag®