Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 76, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1922 — Page 2
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TALK OF SEIZURE FOLLOWS REFUSAL ■ OF RAILPROGRAi Harding May Call Meeting of Employing Executives and Strikers. By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. B.—Governmental seizure of the railroads In the public interest was discussed here today as leaders of both sides in the railroad strike indicated opposition to President Harding’s latest proposal for settling the dispute.^ In case of rejection of the proposal the President may call for a conference between railroad executives and strikers’ leaders. Jewell Opposes Proposal Bert M. Jewell, chief of the shop crafts workers, and other leaders here oppose having the men return to work, leaving a determination of the seniority question to the railroad labor board, as proposed by Harding. An answer will be made tomorrow. The outcome of Wednesday’s conference is expected also to determine whether the “big four’’ brotherhoods will join the striking shopmen. A conference call has gone out to the brotherhoods to atend a general meeting here Friday of the sixteen railroad labor organizations. “We have requested this conference,” said Jewell, “because we recognize that the railroad employes not now on strike will, in defense of the traveling public and themselves, necessarily have to decline to operate" the defective locomotives and cars.” GOLF GOOD FOR BIRDS Links Furnish Ideal Refuge For Many Species, Says Bulletin. WASHINGTON —A golf course in many respects makes an ideal comAiunity bird refuge and golfers, says the Department of Agriculture, should cooperate In the preservation, encouragement and Increase of useful birds. The broad expanses of short grass on the fairways, officials point out, furnish excellent feeding grounds for robins, meadowlarks, starlings, flickers and killdeers. In rougher spots there is an- abundant insect population for bird food. Most golf courses j have water hazards at which birds can drink and bathe and many are protected to a large extent from trespass and are relatively free from natural enemies to birds. But nesting sites may be lacking and must be supplied by artificial nesi boxes or trees and shrubbery along the sides of the course. COAL DIRECTOR NAMED — Lieutenant. Commander Patrick in Charge of Indiana Distribution. By Times Special EVANSVILLE. Ind., Aug. B.—Lieu- . tenant Commander Harry G. Patrick, formerly of this city, has ■ been or-‘ dered by the chief of operations of the Navy Department to Louisville on j special duty with Secretary of Commerce Hoover in the control of coal distribution. He will be in charge of Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and Tennessee. MARRIAGE LICENSES X. J. Carro’J. 1337 Rnsche St.; Efle G. Lock-wood. 414 X Alabama St. John Party. 434 W. Wabash St.: Katie Madison, 1051 W. Walnut St. Clyde Padsett. 327 N California St.: Emily C. Brandenburg, 518 W. Xew York St. Joseph Gecenter. 618 Home PI.; Clara G. Herold, 018 Home PI. Bishop F. Lowe, 438 W. North St.: Susie Neely. 921 Locke St. Fred Ewing. 928 Athorn St.; Edith R. Gregory. 743 vs. Twenty-Fifth St. J. B Rose, Kokomo, Ind.: Marie Roberteon. 332 W. Thirty-Ninth St. Layton E. Wall. Spencer. Ind.; Hannah E. Matox, 616 S Missouri St. Calvin E. Ciugston, 1551 E. FortyEighth Bt.: Nellie Horn. 349’W. Thirtieth St. Mott M. Meyers. R. R. 2: Carrie Barker, R R 2 Vendors Wells, Jr., 3002 Bethel Are.; Sophia M. W:niock, 1142 Earhart St. Laurentie Rotaru. 543 N. Pearl St.; Fae Gruescu. 543 X. Pearl St. F. W. B. Harrison. U. S. Navy, 111.; Mabel Hunt. 226 S. Grace St. Otha B. Johnson. 2023 Cornell PI.: Irby A. Hall. 2015 Cornell PI. Lewis Mason. 1112 Brook Bt.; Emma Barton. 1112 Brook St. Stanley B. Astry. 811 N. Illinois St.; Lucille Brush, 811 X. Illinois St. William H. Loux. 3524 H X. Olney St.: Mary E. Childers. 1144 E. Ohio St. William Wilson. 845 Camp St.: Laura Pearson, 811 W. Twenty-Fifth St. C. H. Fryberger. 1806 Ashland Ave.; Laura U. Smith, 872 Cdell St.
EIRTHS Boys Frank and Anna Trauner, 2919 W. Tenth. Joseph and Atoelli Graeber, 851 Prospect. Bussell and Esther Lone. 131 N. Colorado. Fred and Lillian Tegelu. 1726 S. Delaware. Joseph and Helen Fltsserald, 1735 E. Thirtieth. Raymond and Eel eh McHugh. 2958 Station. , George and Lottie Easley. 1217 Evison. Herald and Lucy Leamon. 617 S. Marlon. Bryant and Alice Smock. 1338% W. Washington. m Samuel and Emma Marvin, Deaconess Hospital. Grval and Velma Dean. 36 Sycamore. Girls John and Georgia Bosely. 937 Camp. Rollie and Myrtle Corry. 135 X. Linwood. Harold and Ruby Hedegaard. 036 N. Oriental. Bollan and Ruui McKumey, Clark Blakos!oe Hospital. Morris and Vern Chandler. 965 W. Washington. Frank and Odie Blackman. 2644 Columbia. William and Blanch Daniels, 1618 Laurel. Claude and Eva Lovell, Deaconess Hospital. ' Charles and Pauline Cook, 2014 E. Maryland. George and Josephine Britton, 830 S. Senate. Irvin and Martha Burch, 4509 Baltimore. Norman and Ruth Bchoen, 751 Emerson. Harry and Daisy Ludwig, 1541 W. New York. Twins Edward and Ellis Norris, 119 N. Davidson, boy and girl. t DEATHS Susie Gunn, 4P. 915 W. North, carcinoma. \ Dempsey Glass. 51. city hospital, chronic j myocarditis. Milton F. Ault. 64. 1514 Central, cerebral thrombosis. Paul Seytter. 62. 1026 N. Be vide, pernicioua anemia. Ida M. Peter®, 47. 1026 Hosbrook chronic interstitial nephritis. Ogreta V. Cappock. 33. 1621 Nowland. mitral insufficiency. Dorris Angeline Bradshaw. 2 months. 544 W. Market, acute gastro enteritis. Inez Steam. 16. city hospital, scarlet fever. Infant Hoermann. —, 453 N. Highland. premature birth. Joyce Tolliver. 1. 1019 Lafayette, whooping cough. Inlar.t Norris. 12 hours, 119 N. Davidson. pulmonary oedema Samuel A. Long. 71. 1109 W. ThirtyHixtb. aneurysm. Ralph Ptnnycuff. 4 months, city hospital, acute cardiac dilation. Leo Jones. 24. 803 Drake, pulmonary tuberculosis. Daisy Kimbrew. 4. 2410 Rader, acute ileocolitis. Bayless Green. 62, 405 W. Thirty-Second, pulmonary tuberculosis. Hardy-. Hamm. 85. 1085 Holboro. arterlo •steroala.
STATE-OPERATED STRIP MINE * Afiag i V ’ -I, Above—a view of strip mine No. 9. with a steam shovel ready to scoop coal from the surface and load it into cars. Below—Maj. Pearl Davis and Ma j. Gen. Robert IL Tyndall. STAUNTON, Ind., Aug. 8. —Troop s here are marking time awaiting some development In the coal strike. Efforts were being made to get the mining of coal under way in order that fuel may be supplied to important industries and State Institutions.
Try Novel Plan fcqr Safety of Children at Park Playgrounds
For greater safety of very young children Edward E. Mcßride, director of recreation, announced today a "Little Mothers’ and Babies’ Playground” will be opened In a section of Willard park playground Monday. The idea is novel In playground work. A section thirty feet square will he fenced with green and white pickets, entrance being through a trellis arbor. A special sand box and baby slide
PLAN NEW BUILDING Sunnyside Hospital Will Accommodate 50 More Patients. Plans for anew building at Sunnyside, the county tuberculosis hospital were started today by Dr. H. S. Hatch, superintendent. The building will be used to accommodate fifty more negro patients. The three buildings now under construction will be ready for occupancy In six weeks. It is thought. There Is one each for men, women and children. There are about sjxty people on the waiting list, the superintendent stated. The new building will accommodate ninety-two people, although part of one will be given over to attendants. Two attendants are needed for each five patients, under the present plan.
Pendleton Has Community Bathing Pool in Beautifid Fall*Creek, Second to None
BY JOHN L* NIBLiACK, Timet Staff Correspondent PENDLETON. Ind., Aug. B.—A paradise for swimmers, picnic parties and motorists lies but twenty-five miles north of Indianapolis, comparatively unknown because of its newness.. It is the municipal park and bathing beach built by the mpdel city of Pendleton at a cost of nearly $15,000, or $lO a piece for every man. woman and child in the little city. It is located on.' Fall Creek, just below the falls from which the creek i was named. Long ago the Indians named the stream “Chank-Nuro-Um-Gi,” which roughly translated, means “The river of the tumbling waters.” It Is more beautiful now than then. Man has combined with nature. The water tumbles over the falls, runs the 250 feet of a swimi ming pool and flashes over a dam, | then away under the interurban ! bridge to White River Each Sun- ; day a thousand people from Marion, ! Indianapolis, Noblesville, Greenfield, i Fortville, and all the country, be- | tween are there. Most of them swim. , Others hold picnics under the shade trees. Water Always Fresh The swimming pool is always brimming with fresh, clear water. There is a bath house where one can check his or her clothes and valuables in a basket, with no danger of thieves. There is water fourteen feet deep for divers. There are lots of shallow places for the rest. Sandy beaches flank both sides for use of mermaids who don't want to swim. There is a tourists' rest camp, where shelter, eras for cooking and water from a hundred-foot well is free. People from Portland. Ore., Dallas, Texas, New YoVk City, Cleveland, Ohio, and Hickville, Ind., have signed the register. A the wall of theereet camp you do not think this is
will be the equipment. Only babies and little girls under 12 years of age will be admitted, excepting mothers who desire to visit. Veteran instructors and matrons will be on duty, part of their task being to guide the girls, known as "little mothers," in caring for their little sisters and brothers. If the idea succeeds at Willard It will be repeated on other large playgrounds, according to Mcßride.
ROBBERY CLEW FOUND Mnncie Police Expert to Arrest Yeggs Who Blew Safes. By United Press MUNCIE, Ind., Aug. B.—A young woman is said to have given police infoanation that is expected to result in arrest of persons in connection with the SB,OOO robbery at the McNaughton store Sunday. The blasting of three safes from which the monej* was taken was said to have been the word of professionals probably aided by someone employed in the store. Funeral to Be Held MONTICELLO, Ind., Aug. B—The funeral of I. L. .Hartman, who died at Hammond as the result of injuries received in an automobile/accident, will be held at his former home in Peoria, 111. His body was hro- ight I here from Hammond and then taken i to Peoria.
the nicest little town you ever saw, we will treat.” Residents of Pendleton swim free of charge. They have a stucco stone b&th-house, but nearly all undress at home and come down in batb robes. There is a nominal tax on property for the park. Citizens don’t have 'to slip in—the gate-keeper knows | everybody in town by his first name, and knows (he mime of their dog, j too. Was Once Public Dump It was not always thus. After the Indians left, the white man. his usual eye for improvement, thought tin cans and rag weeds looked better near a falls. The place ‘degenerated.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CENTEIRIISTO BE COMMONPLACE NEXTGENERATION Scientist Predicts One Hundred Years of Life Will Be Easily Attained. LONDON Ce’ntenarians will be commonplace in the next generation, for the children of today are far better and finer than the children of prewar days, According to Dr. Henry Dwight Chapin, American child special.st, whose work is attracting considerable attention in London. *, “I don’t see why every ordinary person should tot live to be a centenarian.” Dr. Chapin said. Give Babies Right Start “If we give babies the right start hundredth birthdays in the next 1 generation will not be the sensation they are today. “Scientists have discovered that the lower animals five times the period it takes for their bones to develop. "It takes human beings twenty years for full bone growth, and on this natural basis the average healthy l,fe should be about 100 years. Environment Is Factor “The reason so few people live a century is princ.pally because of the social environment of the first five I years of their lives. Those are the most important years. “Heredity is blamed for a good deal, but I believe the first five years of social environment make a stronger determining factor than heredity. “During the early plastic stages the brain is registering every tone and temper around it. “The subconscious mind is at work and will probably break out in the conscious mind in later years.” The cultivation of calmness and j effle eney in children will do much to j prolong the life of ho human race, Dr. | Chapin believes. “It isn’t work that kills,” the doctor said, "it is worry. "Not / one half of our reserved energy is used by the greatest workers. There is no such thing as physical overwork." ANNUAL SESSION OPENS Christian. Citizenship Institute Meets at Winona Lake. By Times Special WARSAW, Ind., Aug. 8. —Dr.' Larimore C. Dennis of Pittsburgh. Pa., assistant superintendent of the association, made the- opening address at i | Wlnprm Lake at the eighteenth an- ! i nual session of the Christian citizen-1 I ship institute. Dr. James S. McGaw, j ! a iso of Pittsburgh, secretary of the i I association, in an address urged that ; ! laws compelling teaching of the Bible S lie passed. I DIES IN RESCUE ATTEMPT Thomas Small Drowns in Effort to Save Wife and Companion. Bp United Press LINTON, Ind., Aug. B.—Thomas Small, a miner, was drowned In White ; River trying to rescue his wife and a companion who were swimming. Two yoiing men standing on the beach saw Thomas ants the two women struggling in the water. They saved the women. M’CRAY IDEA SPREADS Illinois Governor Urged so Dig Coal in State's Name. By United Press CHICAGO, Aug. B.—Resumption of I mining in Illinois mines, under guar-! dianship of State troops, as a pre-1 caution against another Herrin I slaughter, was urged on Governor j Len Small here today. Governor Small conferred with com- j mittees representing the Chicago Association of Commerce and the Illinois Association of Commerce. The Governor was told that Chicago faced the most, serious fuel situation in its history. Reserve stocks will be -exhausted in two weeks.
An abandoned quarry close by became a dump. Then the good citizens of Pendleton decided to restore some of its pristine beauty to the spot as well as to provide a place for recreation. The council voted a park in February, 1921. and bought seven acres of land around the falls. Citizens with pick and shovel and farmers with teams from the, corners of three counties —Madison. Hamilton and Hancock —toiled the entire summer of 1921 hauling and shoveling, blasting and building. Donated $2,500. The city lacked $2,500, having enough cash to carry it through. George C. Klnmf'd, a publio-mlnded
LEADERS MEET TO END MINE STRIKE '■- ■Jr ■ ■4jr<s£ s ~ :•*%•?•••',? j \ 1 | ' < ' f IS/ f' |
The eyes of the nation center or. Cleveland, Ohio, where leaders of the striking miners and representatives of the coal operators are in. conference, in an effort to settle the mine strike.
INCREASE FORCE Revenue Collectors Rounding Up Delinquent Income Taxes. Seven deputy revenue collectors I from different parts of the State have been called to Indianapolis to round up the remainder of the income tax delinquents for 1920. They will assist the regular force of eight deputies until all case,s are investigated. There are not a great number of delinquents, but those for 1920 exceeded those for 1919, revenue oflicia’ o said. SAVES ON ROADS Commission Adds to .Mileage Without Boosting Budget. Due to a saving of approximately $5,500 a mile on the estimated cost of roads Improved by the State* highway commission under the 1922 budget system, the commission wilwbe able to build three, and one-quarter miles of concrete -highway without increasing its budget, officials of the department announced today. GET SLIGHT RELIEF Ten Tons Coal Secured for Sunnyside Hospital. Ten tons of coal for use at Sunnyside, the county tuberculosis hospital, were obtained from the City Coal Comj; p&ny and delivered by truck today. This will run the hospital another day or two, as nearly half of the patients were sent home. Coal is used In summer not only for some heating, but to generate steam for the sterilizers, Superintendent H. S. Hatch said.
SHOWMAN DROPS DEAD W. A. Poss Dies After Riding Bucking Horse at Muncle. By United Press MUNCIE, Ind., Aug. B.—As he ran forward to bow acknowledgement of applause after he had ridden a bucking horse at a wild west show, W, A. Poss, 60, veteran showman plunged forward to the ground. Heart disease is said to have caused his death. A widow and a child In August, Ga., survive. Durre to Be flamed Governor McCray today announced his intention to appoint Edgar Durre as Superior judge at Evansville to succeed the late Robert J. Tracewell.
member of the board, said "Go to it, boys? I will furnish all the money you need at 1 per cent less than you can borrow it anywhere and take my pay from the gate receipts.” Tables are provided for picnickers. Every good shade tree in Indiana la represented in the park. One tourist from Cleveland wrote In the register his thanks as follows: “This camp was sure a godsend to us with our two small children and our not too much money.” Another said: “We found no place to equal this camp on our trip frdm northern Indiana to Georgia.” Indianapolis people can easily reach the Pendleton Park by an auto trip of less thajj an hour.
This picture, taken just before the first session of the conference, shows four men raking leading parts in it. They are. left to right. T. K. Maher, representing the Pittsburgh Vein Operators’ Association; W. H. Haskins, sec-
NINETY-NINE YEARS OLD Horse Thief Association Still Meets Although Job is Gone. v NEW YORK—The Rising Sun As- ; sociation for the Detection of Thieves and the Recovery of Stolen Horses met in Hogan’s Hotel, Washington ; lane and Limekiln pike. For ninetynine years the association has held semi-annual meetings. Since the motor car came, there is j no detecting horse thieves or recover- ! [ ing stolen horses, but the association assembles twice a year just the same, i The Secretary, Edward T. Alburger, j died since the meeting last February, j and Albert Miley acted as secretary. I The treasurer- reported more than j $1,009 in the bank, and on that the | meeting adjourned until next FebruI ary. POLAND TEACHES FLIERS | Aviation Being Introduced in High Schools of Country, W ARSAW Arrangements have been completed for twenty students of the higher Polish engineering schools to sp. ml six months in France to study French airplane, automobile and j locomotive factories. Both the stuj dents and members of the faculties ! of the Polish Polytechnic Institute in Warsaw and Lwow have expressed a ; ; desire to further the progress of engineering in Poland through cooperation with foreign ijniversities and foreign industrial establishments. The Aero Club of the Republic of Poland has been instrumental In bringing about the establishment of an aero high school. | An aeronautic laboratory also has been constructed.
Bag Disappears While E. C. Vontrdss, 3055 N. Meridian St., was traveling between the Circle and his home a traveling bag and contents valued at S3O disappeared from his cal'. Police were asked to look for It. Marriage Is Announced COLTmbus, Ind., Aug. 8. —Marriage of Miss Katie Leslie of this city and Harry Everoad of Hope occurred at the home of the Rev. C. J. Casey of the Hope Baptist Church. It’s Nerve Force from Nuxated Iron that help* make STRON G, MAGNETIC, FORCEFUL MEN, who make their over-mastering pretence felt the moment they enter a room, NU X A TED IRON contains the principal chemical constituent of active living nerve force in a form which most nearly resembles that in the brain and nerve ecils of man. It also contains a newer form of Iron like the iron in your blood and like the iron in spinach, lentils and appleß which enriches the blood, snd plenty of rich red Mood means more nerve force, so that Nuxated Iron not only feeds what might he termed / artificial nerve force tsT'the nerve cells, but it stimulates the blood to manufacture a greatly Increased supply of new nerve force. If you are weak, nervous or run-down, get a bottle of Nuxated Iron, today, and if within two weeks’ time you do not feel that it has Increased your nerve force and made you feel better and stronger in every way, your money wilPbe refunded. Sold by Hook’s Dependabio Drug Cos., Haag Drug Cos., Henry Huder, and all other druggists.—Advertisement. DITES-STINGS ~ Apply wet baking: soda of j household amrooiiia, followed by W Vaporuua Over 17 Million Jar t hod Yoartf FOMINTORTURES Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Just What You Need Don’t worry about Eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy skill by using Zemo obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at SI.OO. Zemo generally removes Pimples. Blackheads, Blotches, Eczema and Ringworm and makes tne skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a.clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is always dependable.—Advertisement
retary and commissioner of Central and Northern Coal Operators of Ohio: John Moore, legislative representative of the United Mine Workers of America, and J. M. Roan, commissioner of the Jackson County Coal Operators.
RECEIVES NEW PLAN Ogle Gets Recommendations for New \ Basis of Agreement. A Washington dispatch today announced that a plan for settling the coal strike had been received by Alfred M. Ogle, president of the National Bituminous Coal Operators’ Association, from W. A Glasgow, Jr., Philadelphia, attorney for the miners, and Ralph Crews, New York attorney for the operators. The plan provides for anew basis for wage negotiations between operators. and miners for future contracts. In commenting upon the plan Ogle! said: "The plan as proposed will no doubt receive serious consideration by all interested parties, but will not be considered by the Cleveland conference or any adjpumed meeting thereof. It contemplates action by separate States,” he said. , SEARCH FOR COAL ; Enough Fuel at Garbage Plant to Run Until Sunday. With only enough in reserve to last until Thursday the board of sanitary commissioners today began an energetic search for coal to operate the city garbage reductioft plant. One; car, in a local retail yard, was prom-j ised, which would keep the plant go- | ing four days more. After that the board hopes to get help from the State emergency fuel commission, it was stated. PAYS $535 FINE Largest Ever Paid to City Is “Honor.” Michael Besesir 615 E. Merrill St., today had the honor of paying the; largest fine that was ever paid to the j city clerk. It was $535. He was sen-1 tenced on Jan. 11 to 180 days on the State farm and SSOO and costs for op-1 erating a blind tiger.
Hospital Diet beneficial in the home The famous Johns Hopkins Hospital -at Baltimore has for some time hoen serving “soft drinks” to patients. The Parker Hill Hospital of Boston, which is used exclusively for veterans of the World War, uses hundreds of cases a week. Numerous other hospitals, from coast to coast, have made bottled carbonated beverages a part of the daily diet of patients. Wholesome bottled soft drinks like Utica Club are valuable Tor the aid which the carbonic gas lends to digestion, and the food value of the suitfir and fruits used in jnaking them. For excellence of flavor and purity fit jvater Utica Club Ginger Ale has, we believe, no equal. Distilled water only is nsed in making it. This is the pnrest water known to science. Serve Utica Club freely, to all your family and guests. It is delicious It is refreshing. It is safe. It is beneficial to health. If your grocer doesn’t sell Utica Club, phone Main 1516. Monument Bottling Cos., 912 N. Davidson St., Indianapolis, local distributors.
“TIZ” FOR ACHING, SORE, TIRED FEET Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tirecl feet. Good-bye, corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tt i g htness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. “TIZ” is magical, acts right off. “TIZ” draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up tl.e feet. Use “TIZ” and forget your foot misery. Ah! how comfortable j our feat feel. A few cents buy a box of “TIZ” now at any druggists or department store. Don’t suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, never hurt, never get tired. A year’s foot comfort guaranteed or money refunded. —Advertisement
AUG. 8, 1922
FORCED TIME ‘ SEC® MCE' WITH UTILE SON Belgiath Woman Arrives Three Hours Before Qifota Lists Are Opened. WASHINGTON —Because Mrs. Elvira Carton, a vour& Belgian \voman, wife of a Chicago man who has declared his intention of becoming a citizen of the United States and her 8-year-old boy arrived in New York three and one-half hours ahead of schedule the Government is forcing Ehe mother and boy to make a round trip to Europe before they may gaits permanent admission to this country. Mrs. Carton, who is 25 years old and the wife of Remi Carton of Chicago, had been in this country two years with her husband when she decided six months ago to return to Belgium for their boy. Barrier Is Surprise The Cartonk have prospered in America, and when the young wife set out for Belgium to get her son she was happy in the knowledge that -.here was s2yooo in the family bank account ana that her husband's monthly wage was S3OO. No thought was in her mind that she would not be permitted to re-enter the country. The first inkling of a barrier cams early in -June, when she purchased transportation on the other side to come back to the United States. She was informed the Belgian quota was exhausted, and was advised to postpone her trip until the next voyage of the ship, which expected to reach New York after the new quota would begin. Mrs. Carton, agreed, although protesting that she had been given to when leaving America that she could return within six months.
ASPIRIN Insist on Bayer Package Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer moduct prescribed by physicians over twentytwo years and proved safe by millions for . Cr Ids Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache. Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer” package, which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeeticfeidester of Salley lieaeid. —Advertisement. ’
HE TCHING ECZEMA_N RASH On Hands, Elbows, Limbs and Chest. Cuticura Healed. 4 “For nearly four years I was troubled with eczema on my bands, eJtoowa, lower limbs, and portions of my chest. It broke out in a rash and the akin was very sore and red. The itching was intense causing me to scratch. The itching vu worse at night, and the resultant loss of sleep rendered me incapable of performing my wqrk. “I tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment. The first three applications allayed the Itching, and in Ism than two months I was healed." (Signed) W. C. Tanner, 105 W. Columbia BC, Springfield, Ohio, Feb. 07,1022. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum are all you need for every-day toilet and nursery purposes. BsßpbSMhrrsshvKsO. AdArcs*. “OrtljSl I It---armieitaa. DspA **, ■*•*.” &>U ore*wbw. Sop 25c. Cfntmmt 25 stmS We. Tekram m. So*# ibn?M without m—.
CHANGE OF LIFE WOMAN’S TRIAL Proof That Lydia E. PinkhamS Vegetable Compound is of Great Help at This Period Metropolis, Illinois. —“I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable llllilllllllilllllllllll Compound and it I ‘ 3 ft claims to lijSrafiro9yP"i be and has benefited me wonder- ! fjmyPf months wits a jp ■ trouble which |f. '’LA. .:3h I confined me to my bed and was only wijPV of the timeAvlHsn jfef jKffl I was advised by ' liSagßßffla friend. Mrs. Smith, to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills. I was so much benefited by the use of these medicines that I was able to be up and about in two weeks. I was at the Change of Life when I began -akingthe medicines and I passed over that time without any trouble. Now I am hale and hearty, do all my housework, washing, ironing, scrubbing, and cooking, all there is to do about a house, and can walk two or three miles wit Lout getting too tired. I know of several of my neighbors who have been helped by yonr medicines.”—Mrs. Emma Culver, 706 E. 7th St., Metropolis, Illinois. You may depend upon Lydia-B, Pinkh*m'rVff*table Compound.
