Newspaper Page Text
V '
Your Kidneys
Muet Function Properly for
You to Be Well.
| ATE hours, rich foods nnd stimu*
1-4 lacing drinks are all bard on our
kidneys. If their action becomes slug
gish, they do not thoroughly cleanse the
blood of poisonous wastes.
Such impurities are apt to make one
dull, tired and achy, with often a nag
ging backache, drowsy headaches and
dizziness. A common warning of im»
perfect kidney action is scanty or burn
ing excretions.
Thousands have learned the virtue of
Doan*.'. PilL. stimulant diuretic. 50,000
user* have publicly recommended
Doan j. Ask your neighbor?
DOAN’S P S S
STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS
foster Milburn Co. Ml^.Chem.Buffalo»NY
PILE ^SUFFERERS
Get this handy tube
AWWvr' Instant, soothing relief and gnar-
Vv nntecri »ocure Itching, Blinder Pro-
' tru»UnKPiien.'i‘hodrucrlst will refund
fIT ths money if it fail*. In tunes with pile
pipe, s&c; or in tin l»oxe«, flOc. Ask for
P^PAZO OINTMENT
EYES HURT?
Don’t Ignoru the dangerslcrnnl* / Z*
of aching- eyes, red It<in. blood- )
shot eyeballs. Mitchell IW
Eye Salve remevM irrits- 4 ft* vSV/
tion. redut, ninflammation. / r ft * XT
soothes pain. / I % X
HA*' l '* KUOKEL / | V /\ \
M7 Waverly Pi., Now Ypgfc / I y' y J
Relieved His Feelings
"Hud 11 good lecture on /dnska,
didn’t we, Zeb?” uslced one of Hr.
Gorton's neighbors, meeting him the
next morning. “To sit there by the
radio peaceful as pie for Iwo hours
hearing him reel off the information
was >1 grnnd rest for me, boat out
with ernnberrying us 1 he.’’
“It was n good enough talk.” admit
ted .Mr. Groton, grudgingly, “but it
dldn’i rest me any to speak of. Hav
ing t<> sit stock-still without n chance
to get in a word for two mortal hours,
I was pretty well worn out afterward.
But I look the lantern out In the wood
shed and by the time I’d split up a
week's kindling I felt kind of rested
and calmed down."— Knnsns City
Slur.
A good laugh Is sunshine in a house.
—Tlmekery.
Have Oy®
a
lovely z
Complexion d-**
You can make and keep your complex
ion an lovely an a young girl's by giving a
little attention to your blood. Remember,
n good complexion isn’t skin deep —it's
health deep. ♦ >
Physicians agree that sulphur ia one of
the moat effective blood purifiers known
to science. Hancock Sulphur Compound
is an old, reliable, scientific remedy, that
purges tho blood of impurities. Taken
internally —a few drops in a glass of
water, it gets at the root of the trouble.
As a lotion, it ooothea and heals.
60c and $1.20 the bottle at your drug
gist's. If he can't supply ynu. send his
name and tho price in stamps and we
will send you a bottle direct
Hancock Liquid Sulphur Company
Baltimore, Maryland
Euncock Sulphur Compaurd Ointment —3oa
and tfie— for um u ith
Hancock
Sulphur Compound
Once Puny, Baby New
Kctore 08 Health
' *T have been using Teethlna for the last
four years," writes Mrs. Maud Slaton, Box
7^2, Alice. Tex., “and I don’t believe it
can bo equalled. Several years ago my
little girl had a bad ease of diarrhea and
was puny and sickly all the time. Now sho
is the picture of health, and Teethina is
responsible for thia.”
Teethina is a famous prescription, eo
pecially prepared for young babies, and
is proving of great vnlue every day in
helping to build up thousands of weak,
sickly babies. suffering from colic, indiges
th n. constipation, diarrhea and ether stom
ach disordei’S.
Teethina gently, safely, and positively
regulates the little liver and bowels, re
lieves feverish conditions, aids digestion
and usrists nature in making baby robust,
strong and healthy.
Teethina contains no opiates or harmful
drugs and taken tho place of oils and other
drastic laxatives. Physicians and nurses
n'timsncKd it and ali druggists tell it
Tries 80c.
TTTY T7T- f Send for ismplc package and
A useful Booklet about liabice.
C. J. MOW? CO., DtpLW7, Columbus, Cws
teethina
Juiids Better babies
WHAT CAUSES BOILS.
Boils and carbuncles aro the result of im
woper diet or infection ©f the sk n. Itwlmrd
to detemd^o tho exact causo but CAKIa k,
will gi vc qu kk relief. No expansive operation
La necessary as vnqapplication of CARBOIL
promptly stopa the pain and continued use
draws out the cere. Get a generous 60c bex
from your druggist. Money Sack it not estonei.
SPURLOCK-NEAL CO- Nashville. Tenn,
FARMER ADMITS
FOUL SLAYING
OF BROTHER
; Killed Him Be^&hse He Al-.
lowed Cattle to Stray on
Other’s Farms'
Hull. Quebec. —Another Quebec mur
der mystery has been solved. In the -
cells of the Hull jail Harold Mulligan, |
farmer of Hincks township, five miles
north of Kaz.abaz.ua, signed a confes
sion that he murdered his brother, !
Thomas Oliver Mulligan, on June 19, J
last, on a road leading to the latter’s
farm.
Cl e-vr work on the part of Detec- l
tlve ’Arthur Malo of the Quebec;
provincial police depurtmenj'landed
j Harold Mulligan in the Hun jail and
his confession was the result of rigid ■
i questioning by Malo.
Lay for Brother.
On ! nne 19, according to Mulligan's
confession, he hid behind a tree, rifle I
In hand, and waited for the appear
mice of Ids brother, whose farm was ■
nearby. The brother appeared, Mulli
gan fired once and the victim fell. The
■
Mulligan Fired Once and the Victim i
Fell.
; murderer then walked calmly back to j
his own farm, cleaned and oiled his
rifle and awaited further develop
ments. according to Ids statement.
Didn't Have Lo«o to Walt.
Developments came rapidly- Malo
was placed In charge of the case and
with little or nothing to work on, '
finally fixed the crime on Hie dead
man's brother. A slip on the part of
the confessed murderer further con
vinced Malo Ids line of reasoning was
correct.
Following Ids arrest, Mulligan was
taken back to the scene of Ilie mur
der and here Hie crime was re en
acted.
Gives Demonstration.
When asked to point out the spot ।
from which ho had shot his brother,
Mulligan ran to It and, kneeling, he
demonstrated how lie had fired the l
shot.
In the confession It was brought
out that Mulligan had harbored 111
feeling toward his brother. He stilted
that he had told bls brother many
times to keep his cattle off his farm,
nnd told Ills mother that he would
shoot the cattle “and Tom, too.”
In May last, according to the con
fession, he had asked one Ferdinand
; Legors to shoot his brother, but Le
| gors declined.
Boy, Aged Ten, Preaches
His Way Info Trouble
Columbus, Ohio.—Delbert Hansgen.
a ten-year old “evangelist’’ who chews
tobacco nnd preaches on the streets
whenever he can get one to listen to
him, was before Juvenile court on a
charge of delinquency.
“I've been preaching again,” sobbed
' Delbert. "I just can't help It.”
i Little Delbert’s “evangelism” has
; been going on for five years. He pos
i sesses almost an uncanny knowledge
I of the Bible and delivers Ills childish
i sermons in a manner that holds his
small audience.
He convinces his listeners he needs I
money for his “poverty-stricken fam
ily,” and after every sermon, deliv
ered on nay street comer r that hap
l«»ns to strike his fancy, the^youthfu!
i preacher adroitly passes the hat, nev
er failing to gather a respectable sum
j for his endeavors.
Apparently brilliant in some ways,
precocious in his ability to speak and
skilled in the art of touching hearts
i and pocketbooks, Delbert presents a
i problem for the courts.
He received a lecture from the Ju
venile Judge and a suspended sentence
■ to the Boys’ Industrial school, and was
; released.
; Doctors Take Safely
Pin From Baby’s Threat
Chicago. —.Tern Curtis, eight months
j old. is recovering from an operation to
1 remove an open safety pin swallowed
in the child's :. ne at 9611 South Car
i penter street. Dr. Loo Sweeney and
Dr. Curl Christopher performed the
operation. Doctor Christopher said a
| rubber tube .was passed down the
1 baby's threat until the pin was
I reached. A narrow forceps was then
Inserted in the tube and the pin closed
and withdrawn.
THE PFArrokf JOURNAL
BARON CHALLENGED
BY PARIS JEWELS
Rothschild, However, Laughs
ht idea of Duel.
Baris.—A high society drama which
j led to Louis Cartier, the Hue de la
I Palx jeweler, challenging Baron Mau
rice de Rothschild, a racing man ami
I memtier of the chamber of deputies.
to fight a duel with him has catiAs
a tremendous sensation in Paris. 1
In making up a list of guests foil
dance that he was giving in his nJ i
nlflcent home In the Rue Monceau^
cently, Baron Maurice, who la l,
great-great-grandson of the fomum
of the famous financial dynu^R
I wrote down the name of Mme. L*
Cartier, who Is one of the great P j.
slan beauties, but intentionally ft
out that of her husband. His so a |
secretary made an error and sent le
invitation to “Monsieur and Madi le
Louis Cartier,” who were ignoran of
the baron's real wishes. 1
“What are you doing here?”
Maurice asked M. Cartier as s</>n as
; ne saw him.
, “I am here because you Invlid
me,” M. Cartier replied sharply. JY
"You are mistaken,” the baron I.J
i slated, while a number of guests sQ,^ -
listening to this conversation U n
amazement I
“Our Invitation was addressed j 0
'Monsieur mid Madame Cartier.’"Qj
la 1 *
Cartier declared hotly. ’
“Anyway, I don’t want you lie"”
the baron remarked and walked aw ;,
Flushed with anger, M. Cur
called his wife, who was dancing Qi.
the time, and they walked out of d,
house, which threw a certain ( j|
ove^the party, The first thing nij f
iii<>S?ik, M. Cartier sent the iml,,,
i tion marked “Mojisler nnd Madai.,-
to Baron de Roqhscblld and at L )e
same time he sent nap J.,,,
friend wished t f
willi swords. \>f
We-Ipon Hie I’// ' 1 J'l A s i
n sl.< <1 li ill I to ' I
I'..iron de U ’dL la iff"W 1 -:-1
of n //'^Hv»d the a A
bungs In sUQ^t; ’/’*'* «'fth a jj
crust of Puft^^'lan society mH
waiting to seif® "'hat will happL A
; Ims just left n 10 "'ke a month
; cure nt Marie^Wl'fiafl- however, and t?
jeweler can dmyotMng exc ; pt u
: bls teeth until A >* opponent letiirnjT
“No Leanw Step on Gas ’’
Sa y Indian Braves
i Glacier Mont.—T he aof( , m
bile will n/r' entirely replace posies
among Hijt\ lmli^ ls untl( f( ■
o, der of braves
(ids of t^^HL /yfatlonnl park rqls
। ervatlon. I that while the
younger k speedily to fliv
vers, their never could learn
automatic usF!' of too pressure on the
gas feed, brake and v| u tch, since they
had been toed long In the reverse habit
of “diggings their heels into the cay
use's ribs./
(
j •
Boston\Housewife Wallii
About Eight Miles
Boston.—The average housewlfcfl
walks cjlght miles a day In doinuß
her day's work, according to J^ksiii^
vey made here by Hie N’ntl^^H
Health.
The foundation survey^B
the ni.'inbl-r of trips the^’-^BB
keeper makes up nnd dowtiWwMlMMWw
Inga day would' moty thm^^qini "
climbing to tho top*,I 1 the Boston cust
tom-house tower—*>proxlmately thir
ty stories. I (
f I
i CXXXXXXXXXXX9OOOOOOOOCOOOOC
1 California Astronomer K
Measures the Universe 8
Berkeley, Calif.—The sidereal Q
universe, that vast expanse be
yond the earth which provides
nn etbereul setting for a billion o
stars. Is estimated to have a dl-ix
ameter of 194 quadrillion miles p
by Allan Douglas Maxwell, a' 2
Janies M. Goeway fellow In tis-q Q
X trononiy. ' q
p This computation is the result V
2 of preliminary studies conclud- p
O ed at the University of Cal if or- Q
q nla Lick observatory on Mount 1 p
Q Hamilton. ' Q
p Maxwell's conclusions were! Q
Q reached in a study of rhe des--| 2
p tiny of stars toward the edge, Q
2 of the sidereal galaxy in which | 2
Q the solar system is found. Hi^j O
2 computation was offered ns fj 2
Q working supposition, which may Q
2 be altered by further observa /Q
Q tlons. ' x
p Peering into the heavens, lie p
Q made his observations by means/Q
2 of the spectroscope in six areas Q
2 in the Cygnus region of tbej §
i Q milky way. The problem con-1 O
g fronting Maxwell was to com-; 2
Q pute tlie distances of the faint-' O
2 er stars and to discover how far H
Q into space the cloudlike mass Q
2 extended. p
Q Maxwell is believed to have 5
, 2 reached a greater distance from o
: g the earth than lias previously g
Q been reached in the section of Q
g the sky he studied, with single g
p stars as an objective. He sue- ©
g cessfully photographed the spec- 'g
Q tra of stars npproxi niely 96.- Q
g (W.tXXVXXhIKIO.OOO miles away. .2
p At that distance few stars were Q
' 1 g observable, nnd Maxwell be- p
': 2 lieves the sidereal universe 2
1I g probably ends not far bevond. Q
1 1 0 8
NOT MANY NURSES OF
CIWE WAR STILL LIVE
Only 46 of 2,000 in Union
Army Survive.
Washington.—Surses who served in
the Civil war, like the heroes to whom
they ministered, are growing fewer as
the conflict fades into history.
Os 2,000 nurses who served with the
Union forces government records dis
close the names of but 46 survivors.
The list is admittedly Incomplete, for
it includes only those drawing pen
sions for their service. In Civil war
time army records were kept less care
fully than today. Many who served
were not mentioned, or were listed
only by first names which came to the
attention of record keepers through
some outstanding act of mercy or
heroism.
Not a Profession Then.
Nursing was not yet a profession In
the '6os. It was the need disclosed
h.v the war, rather, which brouglit
about the establishment of the first
schools for training nurses. A t^eat
deal of the burden had to be borne by
the Catholic sisterhoods. Hurriedly
trained volunteers were also recruited.
Many of these had independent
means, others who felt the need of
pensions Jn inter years wore unable
to establish records to meet the legal
requirements.
‘ Dorothea L. Dix, who served with
out pay, headed tlie government
nurses, under nn appointment which
made her superintendent of female
nurses. Many young and eager volun
teers were rejecteiOiJiy her, but they
found a place in ; ie ^Niwteer ranks.
These Included ^jara Ilnwlowe Bar
ton, who later WitS to orWtdze the
American Re<Vlross. l5:lr -
low. N
The Coo/jteracy n/'lnimed I?i\ K
.^X om ’Zcalt'"' anjl beautiful
a fortune in her WorW, as
Florence Nightingale-
v , ,io
’ ZdX''”’* !l '” ,ear ln '.".TJ" 0 ?
A mentl^ r she entered the
W" „ L tlie tAiDn as a nurse on
UT^'Wt'iefields. liter she went to
XKmery hospital at Washington to
^serve. Now. at eigli& ix, she lives
‘"in Carroll, lowa, when she Is active
>ln the Wotnap’s ReHtfforps.
' Cornelia Known.
Os those on ti>(» i gi ll ro " I >ro *T'
8 ably the most wl<®'ij>()wn, judging
from available Cornelia
’ I Hancock, now at A\f, lt ICity. She
I was trained at PhiliulLqpj and ntin
/ flitw*' to t ' ,p wottnde\ ,i the front
JJfHtig the long campaign V ,,e A rtn y
Os the Botoinac It/ 1564-C-
Some others on th^ ro ” nn ’’
states in which they include:
Illinois—Clarissa f'ossnmn, Julia
McCarthy, Irene D. f >ok of Chicago;
Addie Emery of;i’<Mtinc. Eliza Pyle
of Norris CltwKate McLaughlin of
Quincy, Mary C. Upton of Vera.
Indiana-Mary BraAy of Indianapo
lis, Sister M. de Sales nnd Sister M.
Paula of Notre Dame. Mary E. Miller
Logansport.
jßHßßmsin—Helen IL Cole of She-
SBhßvi Falls.
^^^Biilgan.—Rena L. Miner of St.
“■ Vs Redeem Goods
: of Bankrupt Farmer
Rapids, lows. —A friend In
MMT Is, n friend indeed.
^ceterN^ulbrason, farmer, of Hum
boldt, had it demonstration of the
truth of the ^dage recently.
Mr. Gulbrason had not .prospered.
There was a mortgage on everything
he owned on bis little farm and the
sheriff bad advertised a sale to sat
isfy creditors. Friends of Mr. Gul
brason heard of his predicament, and
the day of the sale, they assembled on
his farm and bought in his farm goodS,
paid off the mortgage and presented
the paper to him.
He burned It in their presence and
a happy group told .Mr. Gulbrason to
start life nnew with their best wishes.
bpumed Parents’ Plan,
Now “Big Business” Girl
Charlotte, S. C.—Nancy Alexander
spurned her parents’ plan for b.-r fu
ture when she decided to leave college
and launch her craft into the stormy
waters of business. She started out as
a stenographer two years ago.
Today, at the age of twenty-one, she
Is in charge of a large northwestern
lumber company branch here, with
control of the business in North Caro
lina, South Carolina. Georgia. Flori
da, and Alabama.
Not only Is site a full-fledged busi
ness women but she is an exponent of
the idea a business office need not be
in an office building. She has moved
the company’s office to her residence.
Not a Good Mixer
Stroudsburg, l'a.-—Tin. champion
nonmixer is William Lacey. Caught
in a big concrete mixer, into which
he had crawled to make repairs. La
cey was whirled for three minutes In
the contents of sand, water and ce
ment. but escaped with some cuts
and bruises.
Outdoor Stage
A new outdoor stage, equipped with
lights, fountains and dressing rooms,
has been built at Montpellier, France.
It is a gift to the city from Auguste
Bose, now a I'aris dramatist and the
atrical manager, who was born and
educated in Montpellier.
TO CROWN HIROHITO
ON ECONOMY BASIS
Japan Will Keep Cost of the
Ceremony Low.
Tokyo.—Preparations are undet |
way i^r the great ceremonies to be
held Kyoto In November of 1928,
when Hironlto, the young successor of
the late Emperor Taisbo, will be for
mally crowned as the ruler of Japan. {
Committees are being appointed to |
take charge of the event and account- I
ants are figuring out a coronation
budget of several million yen which .
will be presented to the diet that con
venes next spring.
Unlike the coronation ceremonies for l
Emperor Taisho, no special foreign I
envoys will come to Japan for the ;
HlreliLto accession. The Japanese ,
government has requested the various '
nations not to send extraordinary rep- ;
resentatives, as in the past, and it is
expected that the ambassadors and
ministers stationed in Tokyo will be
delegated to attend In the extraordi
nary capacity.
Tlie request that special representa
tives be dispensed with is said have
been due to Japan’s wish to econo
mize.
Tlie officials in charge intend to ex- ;
ert every effort to simplify tlie cere- ■
monies In order that the least pos- I
sible cost may be Incurred. But even
with Hie utmost economy It Is feared
that the Hirohito coronation expenses I
will tie greater than those of the Em
peror Taisho, which were approxi- ;
mutely 10,0<>0,000 yen, because general
costs have increased.
A number of special carriages are .
to be built and blooded horses im
ported for the occasion. The music to
he played during tlie various cere-1
monies is to be especially composed 1
by both Japanese and European musi- :
clans.
The musiwto be played at the grand
banquet following Hie coronation will
be purely Japanese, the orchestra I
using flutes, harps, drums, gongs and
other native instruments. At a subse- ,
quent banquet so lie field later In the
evening, tlie army and navy bands will
play Western music exclusively.
Lift Ban on Yank Wives
Seeking to Enter Cuba
Havana. — Regulations preventing
women from visiting Cuba without
permission of their husbands have
been modified by President Machado,
so far as Americans are concerned.
A stir was created when Dr. San- i
tinge Canizares, commissioner of Im
migration, announced that under the
terms of tlie original decree, women
who did not have proper papers from
their husbands would not be permit
tod U> U«r- country.
The decree was aimed at undesfr 1
able foreign women. It had never
been used against an American until
it was Invoked against Mrs. Anna Joy. I
As a consequence transport agents i
and a tourist commission drew or
ders from tlie secretary of the treas
ury that discretion be used in invok
ing the decree. President Machnda
guaranteed American citizens every
facility within reason for landing here i
Child Pronounced Dead
Awakens at Her Funeral
San Vicente, Argentina.—After be.
Ing pronounced dead by a local phy- ’
slcian, Vicenta Corozot, five, came to
life three days later, the death cer
tificate having already been issued.
Her eyes opened and she began to '
cry from the coffin around which a
crowd of sympathetic friends and re- >
latlons bad assembled to assist in tlis
funeral.
At tlie time she was pronounce, 1
dead, her distraught parents were not ,
convinced but gave in after being
sternly lectured by the officiating phy- ;
slcian for doubting his professional
word.
Forecasting Earthquakes
Leningrad—One hundred seismo ;
logical stations are being built
throughout the soviet union by the
Academy of Science, which is under
taking to forecast earthquakes before
they occur, in tlie hope of saving
life and property, I’rofessor Nikiforoff, ■
a distinguished earthquake expert, is ,
In charge of tlie work.
; Housemaids of Paris
Get Their “Rights”
। Paris.—The Paris house serv
-1 ant is in a fairway to becom
i iNg spoiled. A labor contract
' just drawn up. signed and
i sealed, reads:
i “The lady of the house en
' gages herself to treat with all
i the desired solicitude her new
[ domestique, Mademoiselle Em-
I ma. She will accord her two
[ hours every day to go to her
। courses in clothes-cutting, ste
! nograpby.s pliwo playing and
' singing. \
"Her wagos will be 330 francs
month for the first three
1 months, with an increase of 25
i francs every month at the end
। of the fourth, up to the limit of
i 6(X> francs monthly. The new
[ servant shall have tlie right to
i use the bathroom twice a week.
J “Mademoiselle Emma will not
i be called by her first name, but
[ ■Mademoiselle.’
i “She tnus the aided by acham
j bermaid or char-woman, accord
> ins to the needs of the house-
THIS NURSE
NOW HAS
GOOD HEALIX
Praises Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
"I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound for some time and
I would not be with
out it in the house.
As I am a children's
nurse, I have to be
on my feet a great
deal and your medi
cine has helped me
wonderfully. I was
hardly able to do my
housework when I
began taking it, and
now I am a strong
and well woman,
able to do all that
and go out nursing besides. I have
also used the Sanative Wash and found
it beneficial.” —Mbs. Gebtbudb L. Stew,
abt, 103 Davis St., Greenfield, Mass.
Valuable for Weakness
"I have found Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound a valuable medi
cine for weakness.” —Mbs. J. A.
Pietsch, Box 397, Lancaster. Pa.
Hundreds of letters like these are
received by the Pinkham Medicine Co,
Lynn, Mass. Grateful women from
Pennsylvania to Washington, from
Texas to Illinois and from Rhode Is
land to Nebraska say that their health
has improved since taking Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
lama
• I should be killed •
\ Bee Brand Powder or
t Liquid kills Flies, Fleas,
V • Mosquitoes, Roaches,
.y Ants, Water Bugs, Bed
Bugs, Moths, Crickets,
» Poultry Lice and many
» other insects.
' Povzder Liquid
I 10c and 2Sc 50c and 75c
\ 50c and 51.C0 $1.25
30c. Spray Gup —-35c
V/rite for free booklet on
killing hou&e and garden
/ inacct*.
/ McCormick & Co.
• Baltimore, Md.
Bee^
\ Brand
: INSECT
oWl)^***
in ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a
■AGENTS mu MONEY*
Distributing BLISS NATIVE HERBS, for
Constipation, Indigestion, Rheumatism,
Liver and Kidney Troubles. 200 doses. SI.OO.
Refined work fur either sex. Profitable.
Full or part time, multiply your income-
Send for FILEE SAMPLE and new Almanac.
Alonzo 0. Bliss Medical Co., &&,?£<„,. o. c.
High Position
Mrs. Climber (examining railroad
ticket) — Upper Lerth, section 10. Is
that the best you could do on the
Bleeper, dehr?
Husband —Ye-. And you should feel
happy. It's your chance to get into
the upper ten at Inst.
Not the Interesting Kind
Mabel—Can she keep a secret?
Jane—Yes: she's an awful liore. —
Boston Transcript.
BABIES CRY
FOR “CASTORIA”
Prepared Especially for Infants
and Children of All Ages
Mother I Fletcher's Castoria has
been in use for over 30 years as a
pleasant, harmless substitute for Cas
tor Oil. Paregoric, Teething Drops and
Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcot
ics. Proven directions are on each
package. Physicians everywhere rec
ommend it.
The genuine bears signature of
FOR OVER
200 YEARS
haarlem oil has been a world
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
lumbago and uric acid conditions.
HAARLEM OIL
ccrrect internal troubles, stimulate vita.
organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist
on the original genuine Gold Medal.
Dr's Frec-k
Ointment. Your denier or by mali 6S< Bookie!
I Free. Dt C H. Berry Co.,STS Micb. Ave. Chieato