Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 130, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1922 — Page 2

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FAMILY IF FIVE WILL GRADUATE li CLASS IF '23 Father, Mother, Two Sons and Daughter Will Receive Degrees at Same Time. OKLAHOMA NO STUDENTS Mr. and Mrs. Bray Have Twice Been in Same Commencement.* NORMAN, Okla., Oct. 10.—An entire family of five—father, mother, two sons and a daughter—will receive degrees from the University of Oklahoma when the class of 1923 Is graduated next spring. A. C. Bray and Mrs. Bray will be the recipients of the A. M. and M. S. degrees, respectively, -while their children—Otlio, Bernice and Beatrice —will have bestowed upon them at the same time the A. B. degree. All are listed as members of the class of 1923. Twice since the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Bray, they have been in the same graduating class. In 1912, both received diplomas from the blast Central State Normal School at Ada. In 1920, they were given the first two Bachelor of Arts degrees planted by that school. The three children will be graduated from school at an earlier age than Is usual among such advanced students, they having attended school twelve ; months each year Instead of the j usual nine with long vacations inter- j spersed. Graduation of the five from the > University of Oklahoma next year ! will increase to nineteen the number j of diplomas or degrees the family ; will hold from various educational Institutions. Yet that will not mean the end of Its accomplishments, for Mr. Bray and both his sons will study law and expect to receive to- j gether the degree of LL. B. in 1925. i while Beatric will continue her studies for the master’s degree In the field of the liberal arts. SEA HORSE CAPTURED Fisherman Lays Creature on Dock and Rats Eat It. CAFE MAY, N. J., Oct. 10.—Mortl-i mer Alexander, a prominent Philadel-) phfan. and brother-in-law of Judge Knowles of the Circuit Court of that ; city, while fishing off Cape May] caught a sea horse on a hook and j line that measured nearly eleven j inches and weighed over a pound. Alexander intended to present It to the Academy of Natural Sciences In Philadelphia. On returning off shore j he laid the sea horse down in his boat-! house and rats knawed it in half, j Old fishermen here say they never heard of a sea horse biting on a hook and line. The fish are very rare north of Virginia. OBJECTS TO SPOONING Pastor Asks Police Prevent Couples Using Church. KALAMAZOO. Mich., Oct. 10.—The Rev. Foster Fuller, pastor of the Park St. Church of Christ, has appealed to the police to prevent young couples from turning the church building into a spooing place. The pastorj complained that couples have been! entering the building at night for; sparking parties. He asked that apoliceman be stationed at the church In the evenings. LICENSE CENTURY OLD Couple Have Parents’ Permit Dated 1815. ROCK ISLAND, 111., Oct.-10.—A marriage license 107 years old is in possession of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Jones of Rock Island. It announces the marriage of Mr. Jones’ grandparents. Mar- j tin Jones and Margaret Hatton, over a century ago.? The marriage took place November j 28, 1815. in a fort near the present I site of the State Capitol. STILL MAKE HOMES Women’s Chief Concern to Become Wives and Mothers, Says Leader. WASHINGTON, Oct. 10.—’Home making” is still the chief concern of j woman—even of the "new woman.” i Almost one-fourth the members of the | National Woman’s Party, exactly 22 4 j per cent, are wives and mothers. Miss j Alice Paul, head of the party announced. Government workers number 12.3 per cent of the total. Business women rank third, with 11 per cent, while school teachers have 9.S per cent. STATUE BRINGS SIO,OOO Egyptian Sculpture Said to Be 5,000 Years Old. LONDON, Oct. 10.—What is described as the "finest expression of Egyptian statuary art in the world" has been sold at Sotheby’s auction rooms for { SIO,OOO. It is the head of Amenem-1 mes 111., an Egyptian king who lived about B. C. 3,000. It is cut in obsi- j dian, which is said to be one of the j hardest stones on which an artist can work. COPIES HUMAN THROAT Inventor Gives Talking Machine "Throat” to Aid Tone. LONDON, Oct. 10.—Claude H. Varity is perfecting a gramophone which has a “throat.” His theory is that In order to reproduce the human I voice perfectly the element of respl- j ration must be considered, hence his ' machine, which breathes. HAIL 5 INCHES DEEP Stones Cover Vineyards of France in Record Fall. PARIS, Oct. 10.—Hailstones covered vineyards in the Alsne department to a depth of five inches during a recent ■term.

Tom Lawson, Picturesque Financier and Author, Is Beaten by Wall Street Enemies

By JOHN O’DONNELL BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 10.—Tom Lawson, Boston's most picturesque bull operator in the days of frenzied finance, has received a goring from old State and Wall Street enemies that m&y end his vivid career iij America’s financial history. According to information from intimates, Lawson is definitely through. The author of “Frenzied Finance” and “Friday the Thirteenth,” the poet, muckraker, politician, yachtsman and breeder of prize cattle, the picturesque and vivid character who brightened the life of city editors with a sensational story a week, has fought his last battle, on the stock exchange. ,> Lawson has gone into seclusion pending tne auction sale of Dreamwold, his famous estate. After his whereabouts had been kept secret for 1 several days, he informed relatives he j was at a sister’s home in Maine. Played Shoe-String Stakes His sensational career began when he was 13 years old —an office boy in j a State Street brokerage house. Now, at 65, the fortune which has been tossed into the financial arena in a score of bitter battles, has been wiped out and his famous estate in Egypt, on the South Shore, has been put up at auction to liquidate the Lawson liabilities. Lawson became the P. T. Barnum of the Stock Exchange. He began his career playing shoe-string stakes on tips which he picked up in the firm where he was chalking up quotations and running errands. This was in 1870. .While still under twenty he was making money rapidly. Before another ten years had passed he had made a fortune. From that time to the present he has been In the spot- ; light. His practice was to leap into a j stock exchange battle with a roar | and a whoop—to advertise his inten- ! tions, make the battle a personal | scrap with other financiers and keep ( a delighted public informed of the ; progress with full-page letters in the newsappers. At thirty, he combined literature with gambling on the exchange. His

WEDS LOSESf ' PRIMAL DUEL Virginia Lass Bride of 16-Year-Old Youth Wounded by Rival. CATLBTTSBVRG, Ky„ Oct. 10.— Last Halloween two boys, each IS, and members of old Virginia families, faced each other across the field of I honor. A few minutes before they had walked from a party of young folk. ! The name of pretty Ernestine Burj nette, 13, had been mentioned and j each lad resented the familiarity with which the other had uttered it. There was an exchange of heated remarks. Then the two. armed with cumbersome pistols, walked to a lonely spot to settle their differences. ; They stood thirty paces apart. The youthful seconds of the two, frightened at the first explosion, fled. But the cavaliers reloaded the heavy pistols and fired until Chester Linkfield fell. As he sank to the ground he waved his congratulations to the victor. The girl, hearing of the tragic outcome of the duel, rushed to the wounded boy’s side. Recently they were married here. The families of both obtained a special permit for the wedding. HAILED AS HERO Man Holds Mad Dog Vnlil rolice Arrive. YONKERS, Oct. 10.—Alderman William J. McGeory of Yonkers was hailed as a hero for saving scores of students of Yonkers High School from being bitten by a mad dog which he strangled and held until a policeman arrived and shot it. The dog, foaming at the mouth and snapping, ran amuck. McGeory seized it choked and held it powerless on the ground. It tried in vain to bite him. Mortimer O’Connor, clerk of the i Yonkers police department, summoned i a patrolman, who shot the dog. which was suffering from rabies, it was found later." ‘THIER’ ON TABLET Chinese Misspell Word on Thank You Inscription. WASHINGTON. Oct. 10.—A tablet stands in the office of Secretary Hoover, and is an elaborately engraved affair, covered with Chinese characters. The tablet, made In China in 1915, spells the word “thier” in the following inscription: "Presented by the Chinese Commercial Commission of the United States of America as a token of appreciation of the courtesy shown to them during thier tour of the United States in the year one thousand nine hundred and fifteen.” CLOTHES CATCH FIRE Match Dropped From Sixth Floor Ignites Child’s Garments. NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—A match tossed from a third-story window by a 6-year-old boy struck Dennis Martin, sitting on the stoop of his home, igniting his clothes. The boy, wrapped In flames, ran into the hallway and cried for help. His screams attracted hip father, who tore the burning clothes from the boy and also suffered burns.

Painless Adjusting Chiropractic Adjustments Are Painless and Drugless They remove the dause of most all so-called diseases. Decide today to regain your Health by this modern method. Patronage Traveling Men Solicited No Charge for fWnsultation and Spinal Analysis. A. T. Mason, D.C.D.A.S. 308 Kahn Bldg. Hours—9 to 12 and 2 to 5 p. m.

I first book was “The Krank,” pubI lished in 1887. Only four copies were published of his second work, "The History of the Republican Party,” whiertnappeared the next year. One of these, I-awson presented to President Harrison, another to Vico President Morton, a third was given to the Libary of Congress. The only remaining oopy was retained by the author. Never Tired Writing From that time on there was a continuous out-pouring of magazine articles, poems political opinions anch —above all—his letters and advertisements in the newspapers. After several bitter feuds on the stock exchange, Lawson began his famous series of muck-raking articles, “Frenzied Finance.” He was the first to apply the craze for muckraking to the stock exchange. These articles appeared in Everybody's Magazine in 1904 and made the j author a national figure with their savage personal attack on prominent members of the New York and Boston stock exchanges. These were followed hy Lawson's full-length novel "Friday the Thirteenth,” a romance of State St. built around that 1904 panic. Uwson had a tremendous following

Solvation Army Vamp Reigns as New Queen of Broadway * : -v* vv^ E ■:•' AQi&te. Ay/ ‘ i% ■ v * 1 •'v CAPT. RHEBA CRAWFORD. “VAMP OF THE SALVATION ARMY/*

By HORTENSE SAUNDERS. NiEW YORK, Oct. 10. —Anew queen reigns on Broadway! Anew face has captured tho fickle heart and the sophisticated taste of the pleasure seekers of the gay white way. She is Capt. Rheba Crawford. The "Vamp of the Salvation Army” they call her arountf" Times Square. Within a stone’s throw of fifty theaters and as many dance halls and cabarets where the world’s highest priced entertainers hold forth and Wealth invites Youth, Captain Crawford takes her nightly stand and directs traffic down the straight and narrow road. She’s the only Salvation Army lass who has ever been able to draw a bigger crowd, single-handed, outside a theater, than a chorus of beauties i could inside. She talks to Broadway in its own language. "I conquered Broadway because I have the soul of Broadway myself,” she said, "and. it’s mind and heart an well. I love Broadway and understand it. It is the greatest street in the world and has the biggest heart.” Broadway’s Best Showmen Captain Crawford meets the Broadway beauties on their own ground. She has Irish-blue eyes, a creamy skin, red-gold hair, ankles that Ziegfeld himself couldn't critise and fines of such slender loveliness you are ready

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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TOM LAWSON, ABOVE: DREAMWOLD, HIS ESTATE ON THE SOUTH SHORE. among the general public as a re J suit of these articles In which he appeared as a lone warrior battling single-handed against the might of; Wall Street. This prestige made possible pome! of his greatest coups. A newspaper ad that he would put a certain low stock "at 60 In 60 days” brought a flood of money from small Investors j to Ids support. The battle would bei

to count your calorlea the rest of your life. ‘‘To stay on Broadway you must be a good showman,” she continued knowingly. “You must have tact, sympathy and the ability to sense the feelings of your audience. You must know the psychology of the crowd. You must give them your besc un-i let them know you are giving it. “I have no moving picture outfit, but I can make the men and women In my audience see pictures no camera could show when I remind them of their homes and mothers and their childhood associations. “When a man laughs, or looks skeptical, I single him out for special attention, just as a vaudeville performer sometimes does. ‘Do you remember what you were when you left STARTS SERIOUS TROUBLE I Colds Many people do j_, not realize the 1 nat grave danger they it p. are in when they I slang un neglect a cold. NegForm lected colds quickly j lead to pneumonia Real and other serious and often fatal HlUanger ness. A cold should be treated at Its years success treating colds and coughs and throat troubles. 'This prescription is guaranteed free from alcohol or dangerous drugs and contains pure food and nourishment. —Advertisement. '

advertised. Dally, as the stock crept | up, Lawson would issue bulletins in ! the newspaper. Finally, with the city, in a frenzy of excitement, the stock would cross 60 and the editors would publish the story with big headlines. Won Campaign by Gameness Lawson, since the war, had. not been active in the market. His latest plunge into the spotlight was nis po-; litical venture when he blocked Sec-1 rotary of War Weeks from re-election to the United States Senate and made , .possible the election of Senator David I. Walsh. The political victory ivas won by a broken arin. Weeks, a former Boston financier oLthe firm of Homblower & Weeks, and Lawson had little love for one another. Weeks’ re-election to the United States Senate seemed assured. Ahen Lawson entered the fight as an independent Republican. On a i whirlwind speaking tour, the Lawson j automobile was wrecked. Lawson re- j reived a fractured arm and a bad j shaking up. Despite his injuries and bandages, I Lawson stuck to his campaign. Sym-! pathy and admiration for his game- j ness gave him enough Republican votes to defeat Weeks and elect j .Walsh.

j your small town home to capture the i big city?’ I ask hiru. ’What do you j really think of what you’ve become-’ I “I keep after him until hd does i think, and everyone else thinks. Gives Jazzy Hymns “Broadway loves its jazz, so I jazz I up the hymns a little. "I keep constantly In motion. Eva Tanguay doesn’t use more pep in a performance than I do.” The captain was asked If she received notes from men tn her auaudienees. She laughed and admitted she did. ”1 get a sheaf of letters every day," she said. "Most of them are from men. I get more invitations to dinner in a week than I could acept in a year. “But I accept nothing. I make It a point not to know my audience personally. But I never offend those who extend invitations. I simply tell them all I’m too busy. I am.” Captain Crawford is unmarried. She is the daughter of a colonel In the ] Salvation Army. In her live years of active service for the organization, ! she has spoken in practically every city of any size n the south and west, i Hardly a week goes by "'that she doesn’t have an offer to go Into ; moving pictures. Many Broadway ! producers have tried to induce her to | draw crowds from behind the foot- j lights rather than outside In the street. ! Hut no offer has ever tempted her to leave the work she loves. ASPIRIN Say “Bayer’' and Insist! Unless you see the namo "Bayer” ; on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer products prescribed by physicians over twenty-two yvars and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain. Pain. Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package con-I tains proper directions. Handy boxes j of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of twentyfour and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester Salicylicacid.—Advertisement. SAGE TEA BEAUTIFIES AND DARKENS HAIR You can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you’ll get a bottle of ‘Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound" at any drug store. Millions of bottles of this old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredients, are sold annually, says a well-known druggist here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or becoming faded have a surprise awaiting them, because after one or two applications. the gray hair vanishes and your locks become luxuriantly dark and beautiful. This is the age of youth. Grayhaired, unattractive folks aren’t wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound tonight and you’ll be delighted with your dark, handsome hair and your youthful appearance within a few (.lays.—Advertisement.

PLUMBERTURNS BLOOIJTO GILD Albert E.. Jacobs Sells Nearly Seven Gallons of Life Fluid in 27 Operations. PHILADELPHIA, Okla., Oct 10.— Albert E. Jacobs, a war hero and veteran, eats uncooked whole wheat and bran, turns it into blood, which ho nan sell for gold! In less than seven months Jacobs has given between six and seven gallons of blood to twenty-seven persons. Normally he carries about eight quarts in his body. But a super-hu-man facility to turn food into blood In tho space of a few hours enables Him io give away about a quait a week. One week he dispensed two quarts on two successive days. Jacobs is a plumber and pipefitter. In the se/en months he has bem making blood for others he has gained ; fifty pounds :n weight; has saved • twenty five lives, and has found I greater happiness In life than he ever has known before. Wounded in the Argonne Back in September, 1918. Jacobs, a buck private in the 314th Infantry of the 79th Division, was placed in Death I Valley, in the Argonne Forest. With | three men from his company he conj stituted an outpost to warn the Ainerj (can troops of the approach of the I enemy. Suddenly there was a shriek and an j explosion. A shrapnel burst overJ head. His three fellows were killed outright. Part of Jacobs’ shoulder was tom away. When ho came again to his senses he was in a hospital behind the lines. Another soldier in an adjoining bed had lost so much blood that the doctors despaired of his living. Jacobs had heard of blood transfut slons. He thought of his own miraculous escapa from death, then turning I to the doctor, he asked if he could not i give his own blood to the “Johnny” next to him. A test was made and Ja- ! •lobs was found to have an entirely ] aew type of blood, a type that was i named No. 4. It could bo administeredj lo any one needing blood without their lulTering from the reaction. A quart! was taken and the ”Johnny" lived. Jacobs was wounded again Just be fore the armistice was signed and, after he was healed, he oariW home. One day an advertisement in a newspaper caught his atentlon. A little girl in the Mount Sinai Hospital was dying. Her parents were willing to buy the blood to save her life. Jacobs applied for the job and was accepted. Gains Weight as He l oses Blood That was seven months ago. He Lose Your Fat, Keep Your Health Superfluous fle*h in not healthy, neither m tt healthy to iltet or ex<*rcie too rauoh for iU removal. Tho simplest method known for red'i-ing Un* overt at body easily and stejidily is the Marmola Method, tried and endorsed by thousands Marmola Prescription Tablets contain an exact doso of the famous Marmola Prescription, and are sold > by dfuwsta tho world over at one dobar j for a • They see harmless and leave no wrinkles or llabbiuees. They are popu- I lar because effective and convenient. Ask * your drujrjrist for them or send price direct to the Marmola Cos.. 4Gl‘2 Woodward Ave . I Detroit. Mich., and procure a case. —Adver- j II semen t. DRINK WATER WHEN YOUR KIDNEYS HURT When you wake up with backache and dull misery in tho kidney region | it may mean you have been eating too j much meat, says a well-known au- j thority. An excess of meat may form i uric eld, which overworks the kid- \ neys ir their effort to filter it from the ! blood and they become sort of paraly- j zed and loggy. When your kidneys i get sluggish and clog you must relieve | them, like you relieve your bowels, re- j moving all the body's urinous waste, i else you have bachache, sick head- ! a -he, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, I tongue is coated, and When the [ weather is bad you have rheumatic j twings. The urine Is cloudy, full of ! sediment, channels often get sore, i water scalds and you are obliged to j seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable phy- j slcian at once or get from your phar- j maclst about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoon in a glass of water | before breakfast for a few days and ! your kidneys may then act fine. This i famous salts Is made from the acid of I grapes and lemon juice, combined with j llthla, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the urine so it is no longer irritates, thus often ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is Inexpensive, cannot in- j Jura and makes a delightful, efferves- ! cent llthla water drink. Drink lots of j soft water.—Advertisement. Fcr Pain Use Pyramid

Pyramid Pile Suppositories Have Brought Relief to Thousands Who Had Suffered Severely For Years. You will quickly realize that Pyramid Pile Suppositories are simply wonderful to ease pain, allay that aggravating sense of pressure and enable you to rest and sleep with comfort. The fact that almost every druggist In the U. S. and Canada carries Pyramid In stock at (50 cents a box shows how highly these Suppositories are regarded. Take no substitute. You cau try them free by sending your name and address to Pyramid Drug Cos., 621 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich. —Advertisement. ,

has been doing it ever since. Then he weighed 146 pounds. Now he tips the scales at 198. He is 30 years old, is married and has a little girl nearly 2 years old. “If I had to make blood for a living and do nothing else I would starve,” Jacobs declared yesterday. “There is money enough in t.he business, but it is hard to collect. Before a person gets your blood they will give anything under the sun. I generally charge SSO, but I don’t always get it.” SUES FOR 9 INCHES Neighbor Asks Return of Land and SIOO For Use. CINCINNATI, Oct. 10.—A suit over j nine inches of real estate is pending in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court. It was filed against Joseph Heine by his next door neighbor, Joseph Novak. The latter asserts thedisputed territory has been "seized and held.” He asks that the land be restored to him and that he be paid SIOO damages for the loss of its use. COMMITS CRIMES IN JAIL Convict Sends Threatening Letter and Buys Saws. POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Oct. 10.— Peter Tomaselli, a criminal committed to Sing Sing, was accused of committing two more crimes while he was locked up in Poughkeepsie awaiting ! trial for his first offense, j He was arrested for an alleged at- | tack upon his father with an ax. i While in Jail, It is said, he sent a

,t - . U 4 ■ E2X2ZEE2S3 *•

I First Compounded This Newer Form of Iron For My Own Neighbors Their Praise of This Remarkable Remedy Has Spread So Rapidly That Now Over 4,000,000 People Use It Annually

Years ago I began to wonder at the great number of my own friends and neighbors who were always ailing, complaining and doctoring, without ever seeming to get any better. Both working men and their wives were frequently all tired out in the evening, and a great many were weak, nervous and run-down. One had pains in tho back and thought ho had kidney trouble. Another had pains

around heart, palpitations and dizziness, and was sure he waj suffering from heart disease. Still others had'sev- | ere headaches, floating spots before the eyes, tender spots along tho spine and I a great variety of alarming symptoms. ' For years 1 made a special study of I this condition, consulting a great num- j her of physicians and chemists. An immense uuiuber of investigations by physicians all over the country showed that three poople out of every four you ! meet lack 100% iron in their blood. I lack of iron in the blood the great- j est of all devitalizing weaknesses. It Is the iron in your blood that enables you to get the nourishment out of your j food. Without iron, nothing you eat I does you any good. Your heart, lungs and kidneys and all your vital organs get their nourishment from the blood j stream, and when the blood lacks iron I and is thin, pale and watery, you may ■

For sale by nook’s Drug Cos., Haag Drug Cos. and Henry Iluder.-—Advertisement.

A UNION OF INTEREST TO WOMEN Healthy Housewife—Happy Home Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Has Helped Form Many

For the niling,half-sick hous, wifo such a onion is impossible. Often times even the slightest form of housework cannot be accomplished Yet the work must be done. Many women struggle along for years suffering from some form of female trouble that makes their lives miserable and their homes far from happy. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegoioblo Compound has helped thou a.ias of just such women logain their health and strength. Jusv jive your thought to the following letce.s and remember that the w mm who wrote these letters knew Lov* they felt before taking the Vegetable Compound and again fterwards. It helped them—let it help you. Had Nervous Spells Horatio, Ark. spoils and awful bad feelings. My right sido and my back hurt me all the time and I had been going down in health for six or seven years. For three years I had not been able to do my work without help. I weighed only 95 pounds when my husband’s mother persuaded me to :ake LydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Now I heartily recommend it to all suffering women, as I have gained weight and health. I can do all my work, anything I want to do.”—Mrs. JIM KEARICK, Horatio, Arkansas.

OCT. 10, 1922

threatening letter to his father in which he warned the latter he would shoot him when released unless extricated from difficulty he was in. It is also alleged that he furnished the money to Mrs. Joseph Mascell, to buy saws to liberate her husband and Tomaselli. Tomaselli got two and onehalf to five years in Sing Sing. HIDE IN GRAVEYARD MOBILE, Ala., Oct. 10.—Bootleggers and blind tigers, frightened by raids of a dozen prohibition officers from New Orleans who are operating in this city, used a cemetery to hide their wares.

PUT STOMACH IN ORDER AT ONCE “Pape’s Diapepsin” for Gas, Indigestion or Sour Stomach

Instantly! Stomach corrected! You never feel the slightest distress from indigestion or a sour, acid, gassy stomach after you eat a tablet of “Pape’s Diapepsin.” The moment it reaches the stomach all sourness, flatulence, heartburn, gases, palpitation and pain disappear. Druggists guarantee each package to correct digestion at once. End your stomach trouble for a few cents.—Advertisement.

Local Druggists Guarantee Rheuma For Rheumatism What chance does any sufferer take when Rheuma is guaranteed to banish rheumatism, lumbago, gout and kidney ailments, or money back? Why not investigate this offer? Talk to Hook's Dependable Drug Stores about it. Ithjuma must drive rheumatic poison from the system, bring swollen Joints back to normal, and relieve all agony, or it costs nothing. People so crippled with rheumatism that they could not walk have been absolutely freed from the iron grasp of the demon, rheumatism, with the Rheuma treatment. A few hours after the first dose Rheuma begins to dissolve t)ie uric add and drive it from the body through the natural channels. Everybody can afford Rheuma—it’s not expensive, and money back if not entirely satisfied.—Advertisement.

suffer from the symj> toms of a great number of diseases when the real and true cause of all your trouble is a lack of iron in the blood. In theolddayspeople often took metallic iron, which some physicians claim is notabsorbed at all. In compounding this newer form of iron which I call Nuxated Iron, I employed a special form of iron, which is like the iron in your blood and like the iron in

; spinach, lentils and apples. Unlike the older forms of iron, it will not injure ; the teeth nor disturb the stomach, and ; it is ready for almost immediate absorp- ! tion and assimilation by the blood. It 1 is the people whose blood is rich in iron j who possess great strength, force and I energy. If you are not strong or well you owe it to yourself to make th following test: See how long you can work or how I far you can walk without becoming tirI cd. Next take two 5-grain tablets of : Nuxated Iron three times a day after meals for two weeks, then teat your strength again and see how much you have gained. An astonishing number of nervous, run-down people who were ailing all the while, have greatly improved their health and increased their strength, energy and endurance simply by taking this newer form of iron.

Reading, Pa. —"I was a nervous wreck and could hardly do my housework. I always had to have help or I would never have got it done. Through the advice of friends I have been taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for my nerves and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Blood Medicine for my blood and I am feeling fine and doing my work all alone. I can recommend these medicines to any one, for they certainly helped me. I suffered for five years ana Lydia E. Pinkham’s medicines pulled me through. ” Mrs. Walter U. Stoyeb, 1218 Mulberry St., Reading, Pa. Recommends the Vegetable Compound New Orleans, La.— 4 ‘l have found relief frm my troubles by taking Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Comr>und and I praise it wherever I go. could not ao my work as it should be done for I would sometimes have to lie down because of the pains I had. A friend induced ma to take your Vegetable Compound and I nave got great results from it I keep nouse and am able to do all my own work. I recommend your Vegetable Compound to my friends who have troubles similar to mine.”— Mrs. T. Foeckler, 1916 N. Derbigny St, New Orleans, La.