Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1922 — Page 2
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RAILROADS TO MEET STRIKE ISSUE JULY 1 Ultimatum Issued to Heads of Systems Sets Forth Workers’ Demands. PREFER WALKOUT OF LABOR Associated Employers Meet to Consider Message From Jewell. By United Frees CHICAGO, June 28.—Railroads moved today to place all shop work under the contract system, to meet the strike workers, set for July 1. This is opposed by the United States Railroad Labor Board. Executives claim that the men, by striking, will violate the board's ruling first. An ultimatum was sent by the shop craft to the Association of Railroad Executives. Railway executives, it was announced today will meet in Chicago tomorrow to consider Jewell's ultimatum. Unions Await Concessions Union leaders will meet half way concession granted by the railway executives. The general impression, however, was that the railways would refuse to comply with any of the demands made. Action of Pennsylvania Action of the Pennsylvania Railway In meeting wage demands of its employes, thus preventing a strike on that road, may have some tendency to avert a general strike. More than 42.000 are affected by the Pennsylvania adjustments. The demands were: That the managements ignore the recent labor board order authorizing a $60,000,000 dollar cut in the annual pay of shopmen: that the managements restore certain working rules eliminated by the labor board and that certain roads abandon the practice of contracting certain labor. DRASTIC AQTION COMING Government Recognizes Crisis as Gravest in Administration. By United Press WASHINGTON; June 28.—Immediate and drastic action by the Federal Government in the event of a strike of 1.000.000 rail workers on July 1 is probable, it was learned from high authorities here today. President Harding is determined to ■ uphold the railway labor board in whatever action it takes against the railway workers or the railways. Its decisions are to be enforced with all the power at the Federal Government's command. Because the strike will be directed against a decision of the board cutting wages. Federal officials believe the Government has the power to act, in contrast, to its virtual helplessness to force a termination of the coal strike. The probability of a rail strike with a large percentage of the coal mines of the country idle presents to the Administration its most grave domestic problem since President Harding assumed office. There is no doubt that with the first pinch of a coal shortage near, the situation is causing concern in official circles. SAYS COFFIN IS ELIGIBLE
Attorney General Declares He May Serve as School Trustee. Charles E. Coffin, chairman of the board of public works, has been declared eligible to serve as a member of the board of trustees of the Indiana State Normal school, in an opinion received from Attorney General U. S. Lesh by L. N. Hines, president of the school. The attorney general based his opinion on the fact a member of the board of public works does not receive pay under provision of any State law. To Report on Convention Ferris Olwin, Frank Flanner, Jesse Hanft and Louis Bonsib will give three-minute reports of their recent trip to Milwaukee at the regular weekly meeting oi the Advertising Club, tomorrow at 12:15 o’clock on the seventh floor of the Chamber of Commerce building. BIRTHS Alvin and Myrtle Hardy. 1736 Thaddeus, boy. Herman and Mary Schmitt. 414 Minerva, boy. • Aaron and Ruth Unger. St. Vincent Hospital. boy. John and Anna McNeills. St. Vincent Hospital. girl. Manuel and Dorothy Cardenas, St. Vincent Hospital, girl William and Helen Malloy. St. Vincent Ho*nital. boy Ralph and Ada Seheldley. St. Vincent Hospital. girl. Joseph and Charlotte Moore. 632 Spring, boy. Samuel and Bessie Neff. 2809 N. Ralston, girl. Norman and Margaret Alderson. 43 Alton, boy. Bennie and Ada Simms. 1260 Standard, boy. Harlan and Beulah Risher. 1405 E. Washington. boy. ”oy aim Mary Middleton, 126 Linwood. girl. eorge and Pearl Mains, city hospital. girl. Willard- and Letia Farren. city hospital, girl. Ivy and Jane Logsdon, city hospital, girl. Dewey and Helen Reynolds, city hospital, boy william and Lena Plake. city hospital, boy. oar'.es and Edna Ayers, city hospital. girl. . mer and Maude Harlan. 2157 N. PennV'lin. boy. James and Leatha Francis. 42 W. Eleventh, boy. Guy and Leah Hatfield. 120 N. Colorado. boy. DEATHS John Henry Richmond. 75. 17 E. Twenty-Fourth. acute cardiac dilatation. Lizzie Williams 32. city hospUal, chronic interstitial nephritis. Ruth Michel. 25. Methodist Hospital, peritonitis. Bertha Robbins. 43. city hospital, tractured skull (accidental.' Adie Goodwin, 60. 1406 Tandes, cirrhosis of liver. Senia Anderson, 38. 1018 Lafayette, pulmonary tuberculosis Henry S. Wale 6. 73, Central Indiana Hospital for Insane, arterio sclerosis. Dennis Barton. 8. 818 S. Senate, second degrees burns (accidental.) Ruth Wilson, 1, 1020 Hadley, broncho pneumonia. Car! A. Sktnkle. 38. city hospital, chronic myocarditis. MaA Barnes. 20. Long Hospital tigoiter. m Isaac N. Lake, 69, 1334 Park, uremia.
Parade Marks Miners’ Burial As Mob Victims Go To Potter’s Field
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This shows the parade and floral decorations with which Herrin miners bore the bodies of the union men, killed in the mine battle, to their graves, while—
HARDING GALLS MINERS TO MEET WITH OPERATORS Hopes to Bring About Termination of Nation-Wide Coal Strike. SATURDAY DATE IS FIXED Radical Legislation Proposed in Congress by Pennsylvania Representative. By United Press WASHINGTON, June 28.—Presi- | dent Harding today called a conference of the coal miners and operators in the central competitive field, which he hopes will bring about the termination of the nation-wide coal strike for Saturday morning. John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, was called into conference by Secre- | tary of Labor Davis shortly before ! noon. Indications- then were that Davis made a final effort to induce Lewis to modify his views regarding a miners-operators conference. Government seizure and operation of the coal mines for at least a year is provided in a resolution introduced in the House today by Representative Burke, Pennsylvania, a union labor leader. The resolution authorized and directs the President to take over and operate the mines for a year or as long thereafter as he sees fit. MORE LEPERS RELEASED “Mount Happy” Is New Name for Hospital, Once Despised. HONOLULU, Hawaii, June 28. — Leprosy is now so far from being the hopeless horror it once was. that the patients at the Kalihi-kai receiving hospital, on Oahu in the outskirts of Honolulu, have rechristened that institution “Mount Happy." The voice of science has released ten more Kalihi-kai leprosy patients. By the use of the Dean specific, developed from the oil of the chaylmoogra tree, the disease has been “arrested " —as the doctors put it—in these victims, and they are free to mingle again with their relatives and friends, subject only to periodic examinations and their parole not to leave the islands. To all Intents and purposes they are cured. The parole system is the safeguard science throws about the patients, lest they fail to take proper care of themselves and suffer a relapse. It has been nearly two years since the last patient was sent from Kalihikai to the leper settlement of Kalaupapa in Kalawao, on the island of Molokai. - More and more of those in touch with the operation of the Kali-hi-kai station, as well as the officials at Kalaupapa, believe no more patients will be sent to the once socalled “Lonely Isle.” Jack McVeigh, superintendent at Kalaupapa, who is acting chairman of the territorial board of health, has just returned from an inspection trip on the island of Hawaii, and says he found great improvement in all the paroled patients on that island. Troop B to Picnic The annual reunion and picnic of Troop B Reunion Association will be held at Brookside Park July 25. Plans will be discussed for issuing a history of the troop and officers elected for the coming year. Hair Dye Woe. LONDON. June 28.—Walter B. Smith dyed the hair of Mrs. Marguerite Marcrorie correctly for two years. Then he made a mistake that turned her blonde tresses brown. She sued him and was awarded S3OO. Servant to Rival. EDINBURGH. June 28. —Mr6. Jean Campbell was granted a divorce when she testified her husband forced her to act as servant to another woman whom he took into his home. Reports Cash Stolen A. V. Stackhouse reported to the police SSO in cash was stolen from his desk at 1008 National City Bank building today. Cash Register Rifled. W. L. Simmons. 2634 Rader St., reported thieves entered his store last night through a transom and took S2O out of the cash register. Marion Auto Stolen George Williamson. Sweetser, Ind., asked local police to watch for his automobile, stolen in Marion, Ind., last night.
MARRIAGE A LA MODE The high price of shoes has \ often troubled many a father, but the Dalmatian parent is uncon- | cerned, for he never has to buy j shoes for his daughters. The women there never wear shoes until after they are married, i so the shoe bills fall to the husband Even in well-to-do families j ! this Custom prevails.
NEGRO HELD FOR MURDER Argument Over Money Results In Use of Butcher Knife. J. R. Lewis, negro. 508 W. Twelth St., is charged with murder today. Police say he stabbed Bud Lawson, negro, N. West St., with a butcher knife. Lewis owed Lawson money and they argued about it, police said. HELL’S TICKET OFFICES, SAYS DENVER LAWYER Dance Halls Must Close if Crusade in Denver Is Successful. DENVER. June 28. —Denouncing dance halls as “ticket offices to hell." John Hipp, Denver lawyer and noted crusader in the West in the campaign for national prohibition, has joined forces with the Denver Federated Church Council in a movement to close all public dance halls in this city. Sunday dancing at local amusement parks has aroused considerable an- • tagonism, and a legal battle between] the city and the management of at least one park is imminent, following, an arrest for violation of a State law j in permitting dancing on Sunday. The; park manager who was arrested has | also threatened to invoke Colorado’s! "blue laws’’ against Sunday movies, street traff.c, newspaper sales, cigar stores and drug stores if his Sunday dance hall is closed. The art of terpsicbore, as practiced to the strains of modern jazz music. | was bitterly attacked by Mr. Hipp, j who characterized jazz dancing as the i “quintessence of carnality.” “Hellish Conditions Prevail,” He Says “When I charge that dance halls are ticket offices to hell.” Mr. Hipp, said. “I speak with knowledge of the, hellish conditions that prevail in these j places. “I take no issue against dancing as dancing. I have no doubt that danc-j ing, when properly done, is an excel-. lent exercise and is conducive to grace; and beauty. Dancing has been the handmaiden of religion and of art, but how it has been prostituted in recent! years. “If we are to have men and women j worthy to become parents of the corn- ] ing generation we must abolish the j present-day dance hail as we have abolished the saloon. “1 would as soon have my son frequent a saloon as to have my daughter go to dance halls. “The modern dance, with its accompanying music, is nothing if not carnal; it leads to carnality, and, when kept up for hours, leads straight to hell.” "Two-thirds of the women of the street fall as a result of the dance hall,” Hipp said. “Men Have Carnal Thoughts” “A majority of the men who fre-, quent dance halls go there with noth- j ing but carnal thoughts in their minds. ! The youth who goes to the dance hall looking for clean pleasure Is consid-j ered lacking carnal technique.” Hipp declared that innocence could ! not indure in dance halls where “the atmosphere is heavy w.th sensual mu- i sic, and men and women seem to be held together with adhesive plaster. “Many girls,” Hipp concluded, “who would be indignant if they were asked by their mothers to assist in the household duties after their day'B work, go to dance halls and dance until mid- j night hugged close to some man who has just one purpose in his mind—to get closer. It’s vile and wicked and must be done away with.” Hipp suggested that if girls would dance with girls and boys with boys the movement against dance halls would not be necessary. Asks Return of Trucks. The Marion County board of commissioners has received a letter from the State highway commission requesting the return of two dumping trucks loaned to the county some time ago. The letter says the county commissioners promised the return I of the trucks before May 10.
COAL MINER IS ELATED ST TOE END OFTROUBLE Kennedy Says He Spent Lots of Money but Got No Relief Until He Ran Across Tanlac. “Tanlac has them all beat,” said Paul Kennedy, R. F. D. B, West Terre Haute, Ind., miner for the Vandalia Coal Cos., In telling of his recovery by taking this remarkable medicine. “For two years I suffered the worst way from indigestion. I had no appe tite and what I did eat didn't agree with me. I used to have awful dizzy spells, black spots danced before my eyes. I felt sickish and fainty, and woujd get up in the morning feeling miserable. I spent a lot of money for different medicines but they didn't fit my case. Then a friend adviced me to take Tanlac. “Well, I feel like a different person now. I eat three square meals a day, never have any distress, and have gained ten pounds. I sure have to hand it to Tanlac.” Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. —Adv. \
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
! RECEIVERSHIP OF RAILROAD IS ENDED BY COURT Judge Carpenter Relieves C. &. E. I. After Nine Years’ Control. LAWYER PRESENTS CLAIMS Court Asked to Approve Records Made During Embarrassment. By United Press CHICAGO. June 28. —The receivership of the C. & E. I. Railroad was .dismissed today by Judge Carpenter In Federal Court. The road has been ; in the hands of a receiver since 1913. j Will Lyford, attorney for the road, appeared before the court and asked approval of the receivership accounts. MARKS ON THROAT OF DEAD WOMAN MADE BY A HAND Coroner Makes Report to Grand Jury on Death of Mrs. Arney. Dr. Paul Robinson, coroner, today turned over to the grand jury et idence collected In his investigation nf the death of Mrs. Amber S. Arney, | 48. who died on Aloert E. Teegarden’s i farm near New Augusta, Saturday j She was employed there as Teegard- i en’s housekeeper. The autopsy showed Mrs. Arney’s death was due to heart disease. T 1 e evidence is said to show bruises ani marks on her throat evidently were caused by a hand. BOUND OVER TO GRAND JURY Johnson Alleged to Have Speeded on After Accident. Harold Johnson, 3514 E. Tenth St., was bound over to the grand jury by j Judge Wilmeth In city court today; under SSOO bond on a charge of fail- j ing to stop after an accident. For j operating a motor vehicle while tin-j der the influence of liquor he was j fined SSO and costs and on the charge' of being drunk, $1 and costs. Police, testified that Johnson struck another car and then sped through the downtown streets. PHONE RATES INCREASED Muncie Utility Obtains Boost, But Less Than Asked. Increases in telephone rates which, It Is estimated, will yield a net increase of $39,900 in the Muncie Telephone Company's annual income, have been granted by the public service commission. The increases were granted on a basis of an assessed valuation of $797,- j 582 of the Muncie Telephone Company’s property, at 6.07 per cent re- j turns. The increases were granted. The increases, however, were less than those asked by the company. i
At meals, between <h liMS meals, at picnics and / \wm^% home parties, drink f Delicious and Refreshing tTelephone for a case for —^ to V° ur home—Main 6060. bottled unde* an We call back for the empties. lift from" the' a ' Works' .. Indianapolis Plant* al*n at ANDIMON ' muncie. Marion, kokomo. el wood. Newcastle, creencastls* CRAWFORDSVILLE. BLOOMINGTON. COLUMfUI. StiELSYVIM*. RUSHVILI4L.
This shows the row of coffins of massacre victims waiting to be buried in the potter’s field. There were no marchers or no flowers for them.
Miners Seeking Work Forced to Leave Homes
Indiana miners with the wolf at their doors are leaving the coal fields and going to the larger cities to seek any kind of employment. Approximately sixty miners from the fields around Bicknell. Clinton and Linton have appeared at the free employment bureau at the city hall this week and asked for jobs, H. De M. Gal.her, examiner in charge, announced today. Forty appeared Tuesday. Laborers on Streets More than twenty five have been given jobs as laborers on street improvement jobs by local contractors, said A. M. Buchanan, assistant examiner. “They say they are out. and broke and have to have something to do,” j
CONSIDER ADDING SECOND FLOOR TO CITY’S MARKET Committee to Study Conditions In View of Proposed Changes. Will a woman walk up or down stairs to save a nickel? Mayor Shank's committee to study the city market and make recommendations for the improvement will try to answer the question. If the women will, a recommendation for a second floor and a basement at the market may be made. John F. White was made chairman of the committee when it met for the first time today. Mrs. W. T. Bailey, representative of the Housewives' League, is secretary. The committee will meet at 2:30 o’clock Friday afternoon to study a summary of findings of a commission which studied the market two years ago. Later the present market situs.'ion will be surveyed. Then means of improvement will be studied. RIVERSIDE TO BRIGHTWOOD City Plan Commission Authorizes Opening of Twenty-Second St. The city plan commission today recommended tor the board of public works an order authorizing the opening of W. Twenty-Second St., from Ralston Ave. to Hillside Ave., at a point where Darwin St. meets Hillside Ave. It was further recommended that Darwin St. be extended to a width of ninety, feet between Hillside and Bloyd Ave., to provide a major crosstown thoroughfare connecting Riverside Park on the west and Brightwood on the east. The resent connection now is interrupted by the space between Ralston and Hillside Aves. MRS. FORAKER IS BROKE Damage Suit Reveals Daughter of Rich Senator Is Penniless. By United Press CHICAGO, June 28.—Left a fortune of $250,000 by her husband, son of the late Senator Foraker. Mrs. Catherine Foraker today revealed that she Is penniless in a suit for $250,000 damages filed against Herbert Meyer,! wealthy coal dealer. She charges a personal attack by Meyer, to whom she was engaged, she avers.
said Buchanan. "Most of them are without families, although some of them left wives and children at home. The miners are reticent about the coal strike and one declared he did not “know exactly what It all was about,” Buchanan said. With Salvation Army Some told Buchanan they were staying at the Salvation Army headquarters. Practically all jobs open on street construction work were taken by the miners, according to Buchanan. Last week the bureau had more jobs than it could fill. Calls for 241 men were received from employers. Only 177 men applied. Jobs were given 192, the excess over applications being from the waiting list.
CITY PLAN COMMISSION PUTS 0. K. ON 33 PLATS Secretary Says Idea Is Main Road Each Half-mile. The city plan commission has approved thirty-three plats In the last six months, said Lawrence V. Sheridan. executive secretary of the commission, In reviewing the work ot the commission today. Wherever possible, the commission has endeavored to establish major thoroughfares one-half mile apart, at least eighty-six feet wide. Nineteen thoroughfares, with a total length of five miles, have been established. FEDERAL PROHI FORCES CALL ON POLICE FOR AID Mayor Shank Refers Matter to Chief Rikhoff for Action. Federal prohibition agents want more help from the Indianapolis police. Agents Winkler and King asked Mayor Shank for another squad or at least another police sergeant to.be assigned to dry’ raiding today. Three squads now do this. Mayor Shank referred the agents to Police Chief Herman F. Rikhoff with a recommendation he grant their request if possible. The chief said the monthly shift Is in progress and he would see 1f he could spare more men. FUNERAL FOR PIONEER Robert C. Ramsey Will ne Buried At Crown Hill. Funeral services for Robert C. Ramsey. 67. pioneer of Indianapolis, who died yesterday at the Methodist Hospital. W’ill be held Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the Meridian St. Methodist Church. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Besides numerous business interests in Indianapol-s. Mr. Ramsey was an officer of the Security National Bank of Minneapolis. Among the survivors are Mrs. Ella R. Chaplain of New York City, and several niece.3 and nephews. Mr. Ramsey’ had made his home at the Denison Hotel.
WAR GRAFTERS ESCAPE COURTS, CARAWAY SAYS Senator Charges Powerful Interests Have Worked in Their Behalf. DAUGHERTY IS ASSAILED Contributions to War Chest of Republicans Only Cost, Arkansan Asserts. By United Press WASHINGTON, June 28—The promised prosecution of war grafters has been called off, Senator Caraway, Arkansas. Democrat, charged in a statement today. Powerful influences in Administration circles have operated to “hush up” the proceedings, he stated. Senator Caraway made a bitter attack on Attorney General Daugherty. “No harm will ever come to any war grafter as long as Harry Daugherty is Attorney General,” Senator Caraway stated, “except that they will be required to contribute a part of the sums stolen from the Government to the Republican campaign fund to re-elect a Republican Congress.” BOY KNOCKED OUT BY MULE Brothers Find Him Lying Insensible in Alley; Recovers. Brothers of Maurice Metzer, 14, 427 Gray St., found him insensible In an alley. Maurice had found a bottle In an automobile at Oriental and Washington Sts., and drank a pint of the contents. which proved to be white mule, the police said. A doctor treated him and he was sent home.
Eyes Weak? If your eyes are weak and workstra’ined; your vision blurred, if you find It difficult to read and must wear glasses. bo to your druggist and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. Drop one tn a fourth of a glass of water and bathe the eyes two to four times a day. Stronger eyes, clearer vision, and sweet relief will make you tell your friends about Bon-Opto. Note: Doctor* say Bon-Opto strengthen* eye. sight SO per cent In * week’s Cia* in anr./instance*,
How Women May Retain Their Youthful Looks
"The woman who wants to look young must taboo massage creams and liquid rouge. She will only harden the structure of her face and destroy the fine texture of the skin,” said Mrs. Margaret Holmes Dates, the well-known author, in an interview. “Reputable physicians have declared that If she indulges in artificial methods she risks losing her health,” she continued. A perfectly natural method of treating a bad complexion Is by using ordinary mercollzed wax, as this adds nothing to the complexion, but removes the latter Instead. Mercollzed wax, obtainable at any drug store (applied like cold cream), flakes off the sallow or blotchy outer skin In fine particles, gently, without harming the clear, fresh, young skin beneath, which gradually makes Its appearance. The brilliantly beautiful complexion thus obtained is anew one—quite different from a patched-up old complexion. This Is one way to retain youthful looks.—Advertisement.
WOMEN AND MEDICINE In Europe, years ago, a woman named Hildegarde wrote a notable book on medicinal plants. In those days the men were too busy bothering about dogmas of religion and medicine and the study of hei’bs was thought beneath their notice. It was the women, however, who mostly conducted the hospitals and cared for the sick, and thus they learned much of great value. They let the men fight out the questions of theories. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, prepared almost fifty years ago by a woman, Lydia E. Pinkham, did then, and does now, relieve the ailments peculiar to women. It is a vegetable compound and of great value for this purpose. This is proven day after day, and In your own neighborhood. by grateful women who have used it.—Advertisement. Blackburn;. CascaßoyalPilli,, ££“. I | I It 10SES . It* I———wwrrrgT"’ i —maarl All Brif llvm
The Woman’s Tonic F. 0
JUNE 28, 1922
PEACE GOAL OF SECOND WOMAN UP FORSENATE Wisconsin Democrats Place Mrs. Hooper of Oskosh on Federal Ticket. AFTER LA FOLLETTE’S SEAT Stand on Prohibition Is Set Forth in Short Statement. By United Press OSKOSH, Wis., June 28.—World peace is the goal for which Mrs. Ben Hooper, Democratic choice for United States Senator from Wisconsin, will work If elected. In an interview today, Mrs. Hooper, whose wants the position now held by Robert La Follette, said: “I have been working for world peace for a long time and I believe I can accomplish more ‘inside than OUtp. Need Woman’s Viewpoint “There should be some one in the Senate who feels this movement more keenly. They needed a woman’s viewpoint. Women suffer most by war and they could do more toward bringing about universal peace.” Mrs. Hooper spends about one-half of her time in helping her husband take care of his general merchandise store, and the other half in her home. “I guess I will have to give up the store work, if I am to campaign, au I will not neglect by home,” she stated. Stand On Prohibition Asked her stand on prohibition she said: “I am not wet.” A delicate child from birth, Mrs. Hooper was unable physically to stand the strain of school work and received her education from private tutors. She has one daughter. Mrs. Hooper Is a great admirer of former President Wilson. This is her first venture In party politics. ONE DEAD IN BOOZE SCRAP Federal Officers capture $3,000 In Whisky In Pistol Battle. NEW YORK, June 28.—One man was killed and another captured, following an early morning pistol battle today between alleged rum runners and United States customs officers, in Gravesend Bay. Twenty-five cases of whiskey valued at $3,000 were seized.
RESINOL •Sooth inq and Healinq is the name to remember ifyou want to £et rid of eczemajblotches or other distressing skin eruption. Usedvvith Resinol Soap it is a standard skin treatment and rarely fails to remove all traces of the disorder Dorit be a skeptic, Be&mtodayto use For sale by all dru^isls) is#r fa mJL.
BOILS/ of Warning 0 you that your blood I is impure. I Boils are unnatural and of--8 fensive! Don’t take a chance that all your blood impuriI ties will force their way H through the skin. Take S. S. S. and watch S3 your skin clear up and your M blood made rich and pure. The power of S. S. S. i i an acknowledged fact. Right ga off, it clears the skin of boils, H pimples, blotches, acne, ecja zema, rash and other skin HI eruptions—and does it thor§3 oughly. Iga Mr. V. D. Sehaff, 557 15th St, El Washington, D. C„ writes: "I tried for years to get relief from a bad Bb ease of boils. Everything failed Ba until I took S. S. S. I am now MS absolutely cured, and it waa 5. S. 3. kts that did it” ffS Any good druggist can supply yam KM with S. S. S. 9 <£ & makes foujed H like yoursey again
