Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 214, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 January 1933 — Page 9
JAN. *l6, 1933
ORDERS ISSUED IN PAPAL DULL FOR HOLY YEAR Head of Church Urges Man* kind to Make Peace With God. By l nitrr] Press VATICAN CITY. Jan. 16.—While the bells of Rome's 600 churches rang Sunday morning, a papal bull was read from the four mam basilicas of the Holy City announcing the promulgation of the Holy Year beginning Palm Sunday, to commemorate the nineteenth centenary of the death of Christ. A procession of prelates of the papal court, headed by Monsignor Enrico Dante, chief ceremonial officer, passed through the Vatican halls to St. Peter's central portal, where a pulpit was erected. The pope, in delivering the bull to be read from the portals of the four basilicas, pointed out that the impending Holy Year was more important than any ordinary celebrating, exhorting men to make peace with God, “which is greater and more precious than anything.'' Cremeonies Are Listed The bull contained the list of ceremonies for the Holy Year, and rules governing the grant of indulgencies, limited to Pilgrims visiting Rome, Loudres and Palestine. “We now fulfill the promise made on Christmas eve, proclaiming an extraordinary holy year in connection with the nineteenth centenary of the redemption of humanity.’’ the bulletin stated. “Let men lift up their thoughts a while from earthly things, from the sad conditions of our times, to that happiness to which the Savior called us. “Let us collect our thoughts from the uproar of our daily life during the holy year. Let us to prayer and penitence for sins committee, for mankind is torn by so many discords and afflicted by troubles.” Urged to See Relics Bishops were instructed to urge the faithful to take frequent sacraments, meditate upon Christ’s passion and visit places where relies of Christ's passion are preserved. The bulletin announced special indulgences which may be obtained “by all the faithful of both sexes, who have confessed thrice on visits on the same or different days in the basilicas of St. John Lateran, St. Peters, St. Paul’s and St. Mary's Major. “Indulgence will be granted for all sins which are confessed and pardoned,” the bulletin continued. "Let no one rashly contradict the promulgation of the bulletin under the pain of wrath of God and the apostles Peter and Paul.” TRACE RECORDS OF *B!G-WEDDING’ PAIR Hearing Held Over I'ntil Jan. 23; j More Charges Are Pending. j Police records in many eastern J cities were being checked today j as detectives sought additional information regarding activities of j James H. Hughes, alias Kirkland, | and Mrs. Arlene Kirkland, alias j Bishop, who were arrested Friday ] after making plans to stage an elaborate fake wedding. Hearing on vagrancy charges against both w r as deferred Saturday by Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer until Jan. 23. when, de- , tectives say. additional charges will! be preferred. After cashing an alleged worthless check for S3O. the couple was | arrested while leaving a hotel. Arrangements had been made by Mrs. Kirkland to purchase $5,000 worth of flowers and lease the dining room of an exclusive club for the wedding breakfast, detectives saiti. RAY IS INDORSED FOR DISTRICT COMMANDER Election of Legion Chief to Succeed Meyers Set for Thursday. Captain Otto Ray of the Indianapolis police department, first vice-commander of the Twelfth district, American Legion, and former commander of the police post, was given the indorsement of Robert E. j Kennington post for the com- j mandership of the district Friday to fill the vacancy left by resignation of Gus Meyer. Election will be held Thursday. Captain Ray is in charge of le- [ gion relief activities in Indianapolis, j Meyers resignation followed a connection with the Red Cross j which will necessitate his having I offices in Philadelphia. Pa. FRANK HAY INSTALLED AS G. A. R. CHIEFTAIN w. H. Cooper in Charge of Rites For Chapman Post. Frank M. Hay has been installed as commander of George H. Chapman post. No. 209. Grand Army of the Republic. Other new officers installed were. James F. Bird, senior vice-com-mander; John Mathews, junior vicecommander; Daniel Murray, adju- 1 tant and quartermaster; Royal Seibert, surgeon; David Kinney, i chaplain, and Joseph B. Henninger, patriotic instructor, and officer of: guard. William H. Cooper was installing' officer. CHARITY CIRCUS WILL BE STAGED BY LODGE Knights of Pythias Relief Fund to Receive Proceeds of Fete. A charity circus in Tomlinson hall March 25 to April 1 will be sponsored by the Shambah temple, Dramatic Order of the Knights of Khorassan. Proceeds from the circus, which will include thirty acts from leading shows of the country, will go to the Knights of Pythias'relief fund. Joseph Foley is chairman of the committee on arrangements. Bar Examination Dates Set Examination for applicants seeking admission to the bar will be held* in Indianapolis March 6 and 7, according to Milo Feightner of Huntington, chairman of the state: board of iaw examiners.
ASTOR YACHT ON WHICH ROOSEVELT WILL SEEK REST
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The magnificent Nourmahal, one of the finest and fastest yachts in the world, soon will carry Presi-dent-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt to southern waters for a secluded rest, perhaps the last he will have for four years. Vincent Astor, the Nourmahal’s owner, is an old friend and neighbor of Roosevelt. Roosevelt will do no work on the cruise, will not even take a secretary along.
Even a Brass Monkey Must Be Protected From Cold Under the 'Spell’ of Blackstone a Buzz-Saw Saws a Woman Into “Two Pieces’ on Indiana Stage. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN MAYBE you do net know it but even a brass monkey must be protected in cold weather. I will not explain that one but you will get a great horse laugh when Leslie Howard pulls that one before Myrna Loy and her ritzy society friend in “The Animal Kingdom.” When the emotional temperature in the Tom Collier household starts to get chilly and the weather outside becomes snowy and cold, Leslie's heart goes out to the brass monkey. In other words, I am trying to tell you that no damage has been done to the smart brilliancy of lines and situations when Hollywood
started to make a movie out of a mighty intoxicating bit of stage fun, called “The Animal Kingdom." If the Hollywood producers would do half as well with other stage plays when they become movies as they have done with “The Animal Kingdom," I would have no complaint. But “The Animal Kingorn” is blessed with a
wise and sensible director and a cast that has original "legitimate brains.” Here is a nifty that will make you forget the depression and even prohibition. And you probably will raise cain with me for not telling you that Ann Harding is the woman of importance, both bedroom an and mental, in the life
Leslie Howard
of a rather foolish author, played by Leslie Howard in his best Eng-lish-American fashion. Ann is not so much in evidence but her work is so skillful that you understand why Tom leaves his modern Cleopatra of a wife, pays her off and goes to the sensible and interesting Ann as his wife. Enough of the story. Watch the -souse’’ work of William Gargan. Know his name? Well, here is a comedy souse artist that is a genius. He plays the role of a “butling” prize fighter who becomes a sort of a house maid. And that is another laugh in the hands of Myrna Loy, Howard and Gargan. Watch the scene for brilliant fun near the end of the picture when Howard discovers that his wife in the story (Loy) is just a Fifth avenue harlot. Here is some Oi the smartest satire and fun the screen has given us for many moons. It is my favorite movie of the week. Now at the Apollo. tB B B BLACKSTONE USES A BUZZ-SAW THIS TIME Here is a magician who has glorified the rather old illusion idea of sawing a woman into two parts. Am speaking of Blackstone. From a standpoint of apparatus or equipment (as the late Roltare Eggleston
so often told me), this man Blackstone has a "show.” With the modern idea of the sensational in a magic show, he has “glorified” this stunt of “sawing a woman” into half. With a spinning and singing buzz saw, the “body” of the woman “passes through” the said buzz-saw. It “saws off” a part of a
William Powell
board under her and the little lady lives on until the next performance. Here is melodrama in magic that is a darb. Here is theater of magic that is magnificent. It is perfect deceit and what more do you want from a magician. Blackstone is carrying the heaviest as well as the most numerous apparatus that I have ever encountered in his shows. If this man could cultivate the spoken word approach of comradeship and fun that is the gift of Thurston, he would be a marvel with this equipment. And at that he is improving in that line. He should study that approach more and more. I would like to see him do card
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i manupulations, but in this machine age, I guess that is out. Blackstone is carrying a regular ; barnyard army with him this seaI son—ducks, chickens and what have 1 you. Here is the Ziegfeld touch to a magic show. He does many, many things in this i show. But I wager you that you will | have many a merry discussion conj cerning Blackstone and his “buzzI saw.” The movie feature is ‘‘Lawyer Man,” with William Powell and Joan Blondell. I did not care for the picture or the story. It just doesn’t ring true to the right form of the movie theater. Powell is cast as a brilliant and | honest attorney who goes “nerts” | over a blonde dame in a heart-balm I suit. Then because he was dumb, the lawyer goes "shyster.” Then reforms for a happy ending. Powell is miscast and Blondell is too mechanical. Be your own judge. I don’t like it. But see Blackstone and his “buzzsaw.” Now at the Indiana. B B B CHATTERTON IS SPLENDIDLY DRAMATIC In “Frisco Jenny,” Ruth Chatterton returns to the type of role in which she made her first successes. The picture proved it me that Miss Chatterton is better in a role of this type than in the artificial.
high-flown, society characters she has been portraying lately. I warn you that this picture will tug at your heart. You will apprepreciate you own mother more than ever when you see the t r emendous sacrifice that this mother makes for her son. I am not ashamed to say that I shed tears. You're a strange sort of
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Ruth Chatterton
creature if you don’t Miss Chatterton plays splendidly the part of Jenny Sandoval, who, because of the hunger of her child, goes into the life of a Barbary Coast woman, and whose one redeeming feature is her love for her son. Her emotional scenes, which are plentiful in the picture, are handled well. I like the way Miss Chatterton does emotional scenes. She really cries. She really feels her part, and that is to me the n:ark of an actress. It is a Chatterton picture. However, Donald Cook, James Murray and Louis Calhern furnish a fairly good background for her acting. I think the most powerful scene in the picture is the one which takes place in the death cell of state penitentiary. Jenny has been sentenced to be executed for murder within the hour. Dan Reynolds, the district attorney who has put Jenny behind the bars, and who is actually her son but doesn't know it, comes to see her. The ensuing moments are tremendous, packed with real drama. Her final decision to go to her death rather than defame her son’s name is the climax of the picture. It is truly Chatterton at her best. Now at the Circle. (By the Observer.) an b SOME THOUGHTS ON THE MOVIE, ‘CYNARA’ If “Cynara" had been born on the screen instead of the stage, it would not have been the “intelligencia panic" that it was. It is my very own opinion, that
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
“Cynara” when it came into the hands of the Hollywood whoseits,
lost a few upper and lower teeth as well as a few intestines. W e had at English’s, the man who created the role of the barrister who went “gaga” over a female skirt. Here was plain inde nc y placed in a jewel setting. Take out this quality and “Cynara” on the screen becomes,
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Kay Francis
as far as T am concerned, just another movie As to cast—Kay Francis has on her very best manners. * Her bedroom scene with friend husband is “starving satire.” Colman plays the role in the regulation Colman manner. Lately, he is* seeming the same in nearly all of his roles. Watch the work of Phyllis Barry as the “girl” who went gutter, thought it love and broke her contract with the barrister. Here is individual acting that will live although Hollywood direction makes the character more Pollyanna than on the stage. But Miss Barry's work is magnificient. And of course the work of Henry Stephenson as the barrister’s friend, is magnificent. I Let me know what you think of “Cynara.” I know the production and cast are both satisfactory but I do wish that a few of the “teeth” remained in the conversations and the situations. Now at the Palace. Other theaters today offer; Raynor Lehr and his stock company on the stage and, “They Call It Sin,” on the screen at the Lyric, and, “Should A Doctor Tell?” at the Colonial. FRENCH FLIERS TRY SOUTH ATLANTIC HOP Mermoz and Four Companions on Way to Brazil. By United Press SAN LUIS, SENEGAL, Jan. 16. Jean Mermoz, veteran French air mail pilot, was over the South. Atlantic today on an attempted flight to Natal, Brazil, en route from Marseilles to Buenos Aires. Mermoz and his four companions left here at 4:43 a. m. in the airplane Rainbow. They were delayed for two days by rain. Mermoz originally hoped to fly from Marseilles to Buenos Aires and return in a week, but abandoned this schedule. The south AMantic crossing from Senegal to northern Brazil is approximately 2.000 miles. Mermoz is familiar with the route, over which he has flown the air mail, with the aid of fueling ships. bornwassefTwill” SPEAK TO LODGES State Secretary of Odd Fellows Will Make Three Addresses. George Bornwasser of Indianapolis. grand secretary of Indiana Odd Fellows, will address a county meet-, ing of Odd Fellows in Crawfordsville tonight, a district meeting in Warsaw Wednesday night, and a meeting at Peru Thursday night. Lawrence Handley of Richmond, grand master, will speak at the latter two meetings. A meeting will be held tonight in the rooms of Crawfordsville lodge No. 223. New officers will be named. The Frankfort lodge drill team will stage a fancy drill. Several Indianapolis Odd Fellows are expected to attend.
yp a clear skinI got it...and a happy home, too" If you long for a e^er skin pause and reason JjlpSP l A CLEAR, healthy skin is an evidence of pood IP||| health. Ample red-hlood-eells, filled with hemo-glo-bin (skin and tissue purifier), are necesSil sarv for good health and a clear skin. When the hemo-glo-bin is right you jtet ■ it .. . your looks show it. Rut when sickness-* colds or the “flu,” tear down this vital substance, or you neglect your diet, you get weak, tire easily* .lose your appetite, 'tour resistance is lowered !•. -and your complexion usually shows it. And here is the reason: When the hemo-glo-l bin is reduced, the billions of tiny cells in the body I are not getting sufficient oxygen, because it is the Mfc \ hemo-glo-bin that takes the oxygen, breathed I' Se '^jp : * I into the lungs, to all parts of the body even to F !& A f the skin. Also, it throws off the poisonous carbon | Vjaw' dioxide. ' tfilL 5 To clear your skin of pimples and get back ■ >*' v : that old-time vigor with color in your cheeks, | take S.S.S. Tonic just before meals. No need to 2 haODV • c l ,an ß e your diet ... S.S.S. will not interfere Hr} m | w ith any other medicine you may be taking. Aou Rome 100 will be happy with the beneficial results obtained. S.S.S. is a proven Tonic ... by experience for over 100 years . . . and by modern medical regparch. Start taking it today. At all drug Bv s-nTPS in two convenient sizes. The larger size is more economical. £ The S.S.S. Ca builds sturdy Yhealth
ARMED FORCES OF FRANCE ARE BESTJNWORLD Yet Spirit of Peace Reigns in Thoughts of People, Says Writer. (Continued From Page One) equipped with up-to-date machinery enabling them to compete with Germany. In the Saar, France has been exploiting what were once German coalfields, and she will continue to do so until the plebiscite under the League of Nations auspices in 1935. Throughout Europe, French influence in politics is more potent than at any time since Napoleon. France has reason to be satisfied. The spirit of peace reigns in the thoughts of the people, but the powder factories, the steel works, the dockyards clang and rattle as tanks, guns, aircraft, war vessels are hammered into shape and ranged up in readiness for action. The very reasons which give France cause for satisfaction make her uneasy and determined to be prepared. Lives Among Envious Neighbors France’s position in Europe today is much like that of a rich man living amongst poor, envious neighbors. France has nothing to gain, but much to lose by anew war. The French viewpoint, is that the ; instigators of strife in Europe now j are not the French people, but the ! nations defeated in 1918. “Germany,” says the French, I “secretly is preparing to attack us ! in order to wrest back the territory j she lost, to rejoin her dismembered , East Prussia to the homeland by ] abolition of the Polish corridor and I to fly once more the German flag ; on the high seas.” Efforts by American and British I statesmen and even by Germans j themselves to disabuse the French j mind of this persistent nightmare have failed. The argument put to the French has been this: Urged to Cut Arms “It was the armaments race before 1914 which was the direct cause of the World war. If France remains as powerfully armed as she is today an armaments’ race can be the only result. “You can not expect your neighbor to be forever deprived of what you call defensive weapons so long as you remain with guns and tanks and bombers. “She, too, has neighbors against whom she might want to defend herself.” The French reply to this is unwavering. “We admit,” they say, “we have been spending $450,000,000 yearly on our armed forces, that our new forts on the frontiers are costing us $240,000,000; that they will be the most efficient and most heavily armed in existence, that we have 500,000 men under arms. Measures of Protection ‘‘But we already have made arms sacrifices. We have cut down our conscript army from three years’ service to a year and our metropolitan forces soon will be loss than half a million. “We can not move our fortifications in order to attack another nation, therefore, they are purely defensive;’in the present state of Europe we can not dispense with any more baypnets and we need our navy to protect our colonies. “If war should bleak out, we should require to protect lines of communication by sea to bring our colored troops from our colonies to aid us.” Briefly stated, that is the French attitude. The only means of security France can think of at the moment is her army, navy, air force and land fortification. No Frenchman, except of the extreme left wing, would abandon a single one of these unless compensating assurances of safety were forthcoming. Security Is Demanded ‘‘We are ready to go further in disarmament if you give us security.” is the persistent French cry. The answer to this is that the Locarno treaty, in which France is assured, as is Germany, of assistance in the event of attack by an aggressor exists, and that there is the Kellogg-Briand pact. France holds that these are not enough. The other nations reply they can give no more. There is the deadlock. What will be the way out of the deadlock? The solution remains with France. It remains to be seen whether sufficient pressure can be brought to bear on her to give way. Civic Club Chiefs to Meet Meeting of the executive board of the Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs will be held at 8 Tuesday night at 1214 Circle Tower. Presidents of civic clubs constitute the board.
Let’s Explore Your Mind
BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM, D. Sc.
®jJ HUSBAND'S | '%/A w than; it was EofLM that vuy? J “ win him'? l\ srer.ir.'v> -e** nfljrrj'j- ™ instil ' iQSJ JOHN O<U4 1. .li-SB
AUTHOR’S NOTE—Thrse answers are given from the seientific point nf view. Not all moral questions can be answered with absolute seientific accuracy. but no decision as to what is tight condu,: *>r sound morals is possible without science. Science puts the rights of organized society above the rights
of individuals. 1. From all the informationwe have. yes. After a child reared in disadvantageous circumstances gets its bearings, both school grades and intelligence tests indicate its mind has lost none of its powers by the neglect. Whether among savages, or in slums, a child uses its mind every moment. School studies
SELF CONFIDENCE CHART Dr. Wiggam offers this chart designed bv a noted psychologist. It is an important aid in SelfAnalysis that builds self confidence on a sound basis. It will be sent with the compliments of this newspaper upon request accompanied by stamped (3c) selfaddressed return envelope. . . . Address: Dr. Albert Edward Wiggam, care of this newspaper.
give the child only limited exercises compared to the whole range of mental exercises presented by life itself. 2. Yes. but few women realize it. “Get your man” is
Dr. Wiggam will be glad to answer questions dealing with problems of conduct, morals, beliefs, husband and wife, parent and child— an? question in the field of human relationships. Questions of general interest will be answered in this department. If personal reply Is desired enclose stamped, (3c) self-addressed envelope. Address Dr. Wiggam in care of The Indianapolis Times. LADIES—Dr. Wiggam will send upon request a specially devised set of questions and answers to be used as “conversation stimulators” at your nest party. They create a world of fun and discussion. Don’t forget, self-addressed return envelope.
County Pays for Dogs’ Toll
It cost Center township just $294.88 last year to pay owners of sheep, chickens and other stock killed by dogs, Miss Hanna Noone, Center township trustee, reported today. During the year the trustee, paid for twenty-six sheep, sixty-two chickens, twenty-nine rabbits, two turkeys and two ducks.
Mothers, Mix This At Home for a Bad Cough
Saves $2. So Easy! No Cooking! You’ll be pleasantly surprised when you make up this simple home mixture and try it for a distressing cough. It’s no trouble to mix, and costs but a trifle, yet it can be depended upon to give quick and lasting relief. Make a syrup by stirring 2 cups of granulated sugar and one cup of water for a few moments until dissolved. No cooking needed. Get, 2% ounces of Pinex from any druggist., put it into a pint bottle, and fill up with your sugar syrup. The pint thus made costs no more than a small bottle of ready-mada medicine, yet it is the most effective remedy that money can buy. Keeps perfectly and tastes fine. This simple remedy has a remarkable three-fold action. It soothes and heals the inflamed membranes, loosens the germ-laden phlegm, and clears the air passages. Thus it makes breathing easy, and lets you get restful sleep. Pinex is a compound of Norway Pine, in concentrated form, famous as a healing agent for throat membranes. It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded. —Advertisement.
GRANDMOTHER’S ADVICE WORTH FOLLOWING California Woman Still Depending upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
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“When I was fifteen my grandmother made me take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and also the Blood Purifier (now called Herb Medicine). In later years I have taken the Vegetable Compound for ovarian trouble after a miscarriage. I am the happy mother of three children and I thank the Vegetable Compound for my health and energy.”— Mrs. Mildred Caret, 406 E. 23rd St., Los Angeles, Calif. Perhaps your grandmother, or your mother, kept this medicine in the house. If you have not tried it, get a bottle today. Its tonic effect may be just what you need to give you more strength.
NATIONAL WANT AD WfEK JANUARY Use a Times Want Ad to Rent That Vacant Apartment ’I
a fair-sized job—sometimes—before marriage, but “Keep your man” always is a fulltime job after marriage, with no time off on pay. Any woman who honestly wishes to do her part toward making her marriage a success should have but one motto, day and night: “Study your man.” This motto would keep a lot of divorce cases out of court. 3. No, Dr. John Watson, and other experimental psychologists, have shown that babies are born with only two natural fears—the fear of falling, if unsupported, and the fear of a loud noise. All other fears are learned fears, usually taught us by parents and teachers. No doubt some people learn fears much more easily than others, but precisely because all fears, except two, are learned, they can be unlearned. Begin to unscramble all your fears now. You can do it.
**V # * •.* *\V' •*••**• *.'•*'• • *,*•••* • • i .. '.*.**• '•'.• • . ’'.ljrrir ■'' K&l.'. y.*.:** •'• •. ■ • -.• •.. jCy . —The Times Tonight That This is National WANT AD WEEK More than a quarter million readers will he watching Times Want Ads throughout this week. Your add offering for sale a radio, piece of furniture, auto, baby carriage, etc., or your ad to rent a vacant room, house, or apartment, will receive particular attention. Now is the Time to phone your ad and benefit by Times Special Low Want Ad Rates, only Three Cents a Word, with special multiple rates of Seven Days for the price of Five, and Four Days for the Price of Three. Ten per cent discount for prompt payment. Phone your ad Now for Want Ad Week! Riley 5551 njjfHWHf I
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HOOVER TAKES FILIPINO FIGHT BEFOREMBLJC Bares Letters From Cabinet Members, Urging Against Liberty Bill. BY HARRY W. FRANTZ l nited PreM Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. Jan. 16.—President Herbert Hoover, threatened with a signal defeat in congress, has carried to the public his fight against the Philippines independence bill. Only a two-thirds vote of the senate now is required to make the measure a law. The house overrode the President's veto Friday. The White House Sunday made public letters from Secretaries Stimson. Hurley. Chapin, and Hyde, all critical of the pending bill, which apparently guided him in his veto of the bill. At least fifty-five senators are reported ready to follow the lead of the house in over-riding the veto, and enough others were classed as •doubtful'' to assure a very close vote. State Secretary Henry L. Stimson. in the letter published Sunday declared the United States' presence in the Philippines has contributed to the development of anew base of political equilibrium throughout the area of the western Pacific anti eastern Asia. Commerce Secretary Ray O. Chapin drew a negative picture of the trade and fiscal effects in the Philippines cf the proposed bill. Depreciation of land values and adverse effects on Philippines railway finances were predicted. Agriculture Secretary Arthur M. Hyde discredited the benefits of the bill to American agriculture because of delays in the application of the quota limitations, and because the tariff-exempt quotas are larger than imports in 1928. War Secretary Patrick Hurley held the bill would destroy the progress made toward self-government by the Filipino people. Children’s Coughs Need Creomulsion Always get tho best, fastest and surest treatment for your child's cough or cold. Prudent mothers more and more are turning to Creomulsion for any cough or cold that starts. Creomulsion emulsifies creosote with six other important medicinal elements ■which soothe and heal the inflamed niembranes and check germ growth. It is not a cheap remedy, but contains no narcotics and is certain relief. Get a bottle from your druggist right now and have it r*ady for instant use. (adv.)
