Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 26A, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 July 1929 — Page 2

The Ligonier Hanner : Established 1556 A ~ Published hy - 'HE BANNER PIUBLISHING CO. ; W. C. B. Harrison, Editor = M. A. Cotherman, Manager e i e et e e . <. et e et ’ublished every Monday and Thursday enid entered the Postoflice at Ligounier, Indiana, as second class matter. State Legion Stands Highest ! “Indiana, stands higher today in American Legion membershin than at any other time in- its history’ caid Pleas B. Greenle: of Shelbyville department adjutant. - “Indiana has forged from sixtecnth place to first ameng all large departments of the Legion in the world and second only to the small department of Mississippi in uzvz_m:.-,-rr'%n'p gain,” said CGreenlee. - “In neck to neck race based on member gain Mississippi nosed Indi‘ana out of first place in tha parade position at the Louisviile. Ky nationall convention Sept. 20 to Oci. 4 by only 1.61 per cent. Having its membership out of the way thie posts of the Indiana Legion have turned their attention -to programs of communisy services and Ajnnim' baseball @ said (ireenlee, : Work On State Roads Progesses Several bridges were completed on state roads and opened to service las week some new pavement went in‘e use and in two cases detours -slightls lengthened according to Johi & Lrown director of the state highway department in the commission’s weekly traitic bulletin- issued Saturday. : Director Brown said that ‘;n-li'vi,.\ prevails all. ovér the svstem as contractors proceed \\'i(n',m\vnmm layving and maintenance forces drag unpaved roads. rébuild -berms cote. Do spite unusual rainfail considerabie headway is being made at laying concrete pavement, he added as ail forees strive for the goal of several hundrea - miles of finished roads by the close of the season. = : Chicken Thievery (auses Stir Over in [lkhart county considerable dgitation exists over the preva. . .ence of chicken. thievery. " In one locality covering quite a wide area every chicken has heen. Stolen according to reports coming from there. It is the generai belief that tle chickens are trugked directly inte Chicago by the thieves. The sheriff of Elkhart county was in LaGrange Wednesday morning and he reported one hundred and thirty young chickens were stolen Monday night from o farm in Elkhart county near the conn ty line and the sheritf was there investigating. ’ New Railroad Bridge i The work has started on a new ove: head railroad bridge at Millersburg replacing the old one that was huilt (in 1892. The new structure: will be much wider than the old one and the objectionable sharp turns will be eliminated. The bridge will be readyv for _use by December 15 if the promises of the builders are kept. The cost of the Siructure about $40,000 will be borne by the railroad company while Elkhart cointy will pay for the approaches an item of about $20,000. The Hecker-Moon Consrtuction company of Chicago is. building the bridge on contract. | Mrs. Sophia Tyler Dies. } Mrs. Sophia Tyler 87 died at the] home of her daughter. Mrs. F. W. Woodworth at Goshen Friday m'orning' She is survived’ by three daughters. Elizabeth Downing of Indianapolis; Mrs. Van Auken of Auburn and Mrs. F. W. Woodworth of Goshen two sons E. N. Tylerr of Toledo and Henry Tyler of Li{:onier; nine grandchildran sixteen great grandchildren and fou - great great grandchildren,. ' Funeral services were held Sundav -afternoon at two o’clock at the Woodworth home and interment was mad: in Ligonier. : Plans For Legion Ball Tourney - Plans for the American Legion junior state baseball tournament which will be played at Muncie July 21, Aug. ‘1 and 2 have been announced by Robert Bushee of Warsaw state athletic officer of the Legion. - Thirteen district winners will compete there and the state champion will ‘receive a trophy presented chy. 10 Arthur Ball former department commander. This trophy will be the per}nanent property of the ILegion post whose representatives win the champion title three times. ‘ e . A R o 45 4 { Another Payment : Checks were received on Monday from the comptroller of the currency ‘at Washington D. C., covering another twenty percent of the amount due depositors of the LaGrange National bank which failed October 24 1927. This makes a total of eighty percent paid to depnsitqrs in less than two years which is regarded as a creditable showing. v » e Booze Car Wrecked.: A fast speeding booze runner ran off U. S. road 20 east of Angola anid his chrysler sport model was wrecked and he was injured. He gave his name as Richard Rogers, of Trenton, Mich. He was fined $350 for transporting liquor and his car confiscated. ———————— s Y Fire Destroys Plant ’ More than 100 men were thrown out of employmerit at Cambridge C_ity, when the Malgra Castings plant was! destroyed by fire with damage estimated at $70,000. The plant was one of the largest of its kind in the state.|

Extract Pleasure From “Pleasantry of Dread” “An ingenious American,” says Dr. | Joseph Lobel, in “Don’t Be Afraid,” | “has characterized fear . . as a ‘do- | mestic sport.” Just as in various games we exposg ourselves to danger, | kriowing with (‘sl‘t:lit)ty that we shall ’ ‘eseape, just as we enjoy the pleasant | ticklish feeling that ensues as a re-! sult of this combination of sensations, f ‘so, says he, ‘we often create for our- i selves, ont of a pure desire for sensation, the pleasantry of dread. l “It is not man alone who sets out ' to learn how to shudder. The motlier | who sits on the couch anxiously await- g ing her boy's return from school, is | doing the same thing. 'Sh(wsurrem!ors ’ herself to feelings of anxiety and pie- , tures his having fallen into the water. | In reality, she feels nothing of the kind. Otherwise she would have rushed long ago to the water, instead of sifting quietly on the ‘eo_ug-h. indulg- . ing, pleasantly, in feelings of apprehension, ' S ’ “Lut picturing to herself all the dangers into which her son may. have fallen, she is unconsciously enjoying herself. Out. of the everyday, monotmous home-coming of her youngster, | shie has created a dramatic event. She will welcome him with a sigh of relief and happiness when he crosses the threshold just as she had really been expecting hiin to . arrive, safe and sound.” ; American Elk Splendid . Creature of the Wild "The American elk, or wapiti, is the most beautiful and stately of all the deer tribe. He-is not actually an elk, tor the name really belongs to the elk of lf»unl(o, an animal very closely ‘re- | fated fe our moose. . : Nome of ‘the Indian tribes ecalled hitg wapiti, and we might well let it. Zo a! that, believing that. it is a good uame, writes Arthur Newton Pack in i Nature Magazine. At any rate, when I first saw one of these great, tall antlered-balls looking at me as I crept to the edge of the lick, my heart cer tainly went wapity-wapity-wap. i I remembered that once—once upon # tiime—these handsome fellows had vanged from the Atlantic slope to the tocky mountains un'd’_he‘\‘uml to the very Pacific; but now there were but | few Jeft and most of those were here in the Rocky mountain woods. : . While the elk are content to stay in the nountains during the summer, the deep winter snows drive them down to the valleys, where men make fences out of piled antlers. : Death by Sanshine : Sunshine. the great cure-all and life-giver, is a paradox in one case at least. Through the medium - of the geranium it spells death to insects. Insects which are attracted by the teiives of this beautiful - plant feast upen them and then drop paralyzed and vsually die. Where the sun comes ir s indicated by the fact that the deadliness of the poison depends upon the amount of exposure to the sun of the plunt, those of longest exposure beinge the deadliest. - This discovery has opened. up a new field in the study of insecticidés and experiments are being pushed to determine what the death-dealing agent inay -be o ' Lo e . New England’s Impress New Endgland has left a deep impress upon the Pacific Northwest. Isaac 1. Stevens, first territorial gov - ernor f Washington, was a MassachuSetts man. Veneration for New Engtand traditions and culture has found expression in the Northwest region in various ways, notably in the names bestowed upon the public schools. In Spokane, for instance, there are the Webster, the Adams, the Emerson, the Hawthorne, the Holmes, the Longfellow, the Lowell, the Stevens, the Whittier and others,—Spokane Spokes-man-Review. : s o ~ Nature’s Habits Whit & creature of habit, too, nature is as she appears in the weather! If she miscarry once she will twice or thrice, and a dozen times. In a wet time it rains today .because it ruined yesterday, and will rain tomorrow because it rained today. Are the | crops in any part of the country drowning? . They shall continue to drown. Are they burning up? They shall continue to burn. The elements get in a rut and can't get out without a shock.—John Burroughs, et et st . ' Longest Lived Animal A giant tortoise that was an in‘mate of the great Napoleon is still iving on the island of St Helena, | IyB T. G. Boulenger, director of the london zoo, in Animal Mysteries. Tor- | oises attain a greater age than any other animal. Several of these creatures, weighing over 550 pounds each, owned by Lord Rothsechild, the banker, |- were close on three centuries old when scientific claims put an end to their 'protra.cted existence. - No Editorial Comment ~ Wien the Daily Courant, London’s | first successtul daily newspaper, ap- | peared in 1702, it consisted of a single page of two eolumns and professed to give only foreign pews. Tt 4@ssured its readers that it would not give any comments of its own, “supposing other | people to hgve sense enough to make | reflections for themselves.” The Cou. | rant came to an end in 1735, when it '~ was absorbed in the Daily Gazeteer.— Detroit News, = = e

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"HE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

His Life Dedicated to : - Fight on Tuberculosis Dr. Edward Livingston Trudesa, the pioneer in the modern treatment of tuberculosis in Ameriea, was himself a sufferer from the disense In spite of his illness, however. hie -did much experimental work as well as diac nosis and treatment. Dr..J. A. Myers, in a sketeh of Doctor Tradeénun's lie in Hygela Magazine, observes thut perhaps nothing in the whole field of medicine in the last fifty years hus done -so much directly ‘and indirectiy to relieve suffering and extend the vears of gsefulness of so muany pea ple as the principles that this physi cinn. laid down at the saniiorium ui ‘Saranac Lake. 13 Gt it was Trudeau who opened the first i:mnm'tm‘y for the studsy of tubercnlosis in America. It was he who first grasped the principle of tuber culosis immunity. [t was he who did the first experimental work in tube; culosis in this country. !t was' he who first stained and visunlized the tuber cle bacillus in this country. It was ho who built that pioneer sanitarinm at Saranac Lake which has treated more than 6,500 patients und toduy stands in the front rank of such institutions Sacred Stone of Erin - | . Lodged in Cathedrei AThb ancient Clogzh Oir stone from which Clogher, ireland, is suid to have derived its name, has, with the consent of the bishop of Cloghe heen: plaeed in the vestibule of St Mucartun's cathedral. to preserve it from the weather. . The Clogh-Oir stone is said to have been one of the three sacred stones of Erin, the oth ers being ‘the Lia Fail, or Stone! of Desting, which rests under the coronation chair in Westminster ahbey, and the Crom (‘uagh, which is supposed to _have bowed bhofore St. Patriek. This famous stone which has hitherto rested against the north wall eof the cathedral, was visited at one time by Concober MacVessa, hizh king of Ul ster. - Canon Muaguire, who wrote a comnientary on the register of Clogier In 1490, stutes: ‘*“This sacred «Stone was preserved on the right of the entrance into the church, and traces of the gold with which it has been covered by the worshipers of the idol Ceomeod Celsetachit are still vis--ible.” . ‘ Early Street Lightifig : . Some form of agiificial licht must have heen in use for domestic pur poses from the very earliest times. but thoungh large “cities and a high state of civilization existed among the Ezyutians. Greiks and Romans, «the sy~tomatic Hghting of streets was unknevn to theny From the writings of Libsiins however, who lived in the beginning of the Lourth century after Christ, we may econclude that the streets of his native ecity., Antioch, wele lighted (by Jamips, and Edessa, in Syria, was similarly fllumjnated about A, D. 500 Of modern clities Paris was the firsi to light its streets. In the "beginning of the Sixteenth century it was much infested with robbers and incendinries. so that the inhabitants were ordered in 1524 to keep lights burning after nine o’clock ‘ln the evening before all: houses fronting a street.

Louisiana Purchase

In the treaty providing for the Louisiana ‘Purchase there was no definition of ' the boundaries of the territory. When the American commissioners insisted upon a definition of the extent, ‘they were Informed that the boundaries were theé same as they had been when the land was in the hands of the French, that- is, according to Barthier’s original treaty of retrocession. It included [Louisiana west of the Mississippl, Arkansas, Missouri, Towa, Minnesota west of the Mississippi, the Dakotas. Nehraska, Wyoming, Montana, most of Kansas, Indian Territory and Colorado east of the ‘Rocky mountains. Famous Building . The Mormon tabernacle in Salt Lake City is 250 feet long by 150 feet wide and 80 feet high. and seats from 6,000 to 8000 people. Its self-supporting roof rests on pillars or buttresses of red sandstone, which are“from ten to twelve feet apart in the entire circumference of the building. No nails were used in making the roof, the timbers being tied in places with cowhide and held together with wooden pegs. It was begun in 18G3. In its shape the Mormon - tabernacle 1s a perfect ellipse. : River Divides States The north bank of the Ohio river is the northern boundary of the state of Kentucky, the exact houndary line being fixed by the low-water mark of the river. The jurisdiction of the state of Kentucky extends to the low-water mark on the Indiana side. The United States government has jurisdietion over the whole river, as far as commerce is concerned. According to the Constitution the federal government has a right to regulate commerce, and the Ohio river is the commercial highway. . ' G i Get Interested in Work Life is never interesting, life Is never pleasing, unless you lose yourself completely in the task in which you are enguged. Then the hours never drag. But every fime a lazy man looks at the clock the day becomes longer,—Grit, '

.. THE CHEVROLET : Chevrolet-Lincoln Sales Phone 145 ... . Ligonier, Ind. | A Chevrolet with a chassis built in 1913 a full vear be{ore the World War ‘began, and a motor that was assembled ’;x\'hen_ our dou’ghbo‘p'a were encamping back in 1917 is still in daily use at ‘Goliad Texas, ~ | : ‘ | Itis called “Spark Plug” by its . proud owner, Hugcj) Wilks, and of the quillions of Chevrolets in use t(;day on ‘both hemispheres |it is perhaps the “oldest. ! . Ttwo, the 2.029’1:(,‘,3}':\'1'016{ with its smooth “six -cylinder motor - car outclimb, out-speed afud out-haul it. True 1100, that “‘Spark 'i’lug" appears a bit cantediluvian when' contrasted with the ‘handsoine neyw Fisher bodies of the i}‘.):&' Chevrolet.” |Buf “Spark Plug” can do. plenty of/ climbing, speeding Land hauling on its own aceount and iz beyvond question an -outstanding :cvxample of a jong !lived and dependable ‘automobile. e | On several occasions Wilks has hitf('hed a trailer to *'Spark Plug” and Tpu}lcfd'a load of 2;,()00 pounds, plu.ss.thot (815 pounds whiclh the trailer weighs, all the 'way to Sajn Antonio 125 niiles distant. | : : | Not long age lie piled it high with a 1515 pound load of cottomw bales and i(im\'e it through a dry creek bed-—— a road which no jother driver in the section would dare traverse in a modern ca[r. ‘Many times he has driven it with water up to the floor boards. ! No hill in the section is too tough Exm- “Spark Plug’ and Wilks says that \it is sufficiently economical continu%in;: to give as good as 20 miles to the ‘gallon. i i One ohjecti(m‘; however is lodged %against it- by Wilks and this is a \friendly one, It is his complaing ‘against the crowds which his car. inlv\'m'i'ab]y attracts when he drives it ‘into San Antonio. : - ; “Spark Plug” had many owners-— iéight to be exact—before Wilks pur,(:hused it from| the Voght Chevrolet it.’(nm)an,\' of Sc}mlenberg, Texas nine i'ye;n-s ago. qu four yeats he got isplendid service from the 1913 motor | which might yet be encased heneath ithe 1913 hoad but fer ‘anfla(:cide]’u which occurred five years ago. ’ ‘ At that time a’ 1917 Chevrolet ownled by .one of Wilks' brothers caught 'fire and its chassis was destroyed. |The motor was unharmed so it was \decided to give “Spark Plug’s” ori“gin'al_ motor a well deserved rest and isubstitute the, newer one. ' %_ “Spark Plug’s” total mileage is in{determinable. @ Since Wilks has had |it, three speedometers have been in luse. One registred 75,000 miles the isecond 61,000 and the present one (has run up 15,000, : s ; The total repair bill during Wilks inin'e vears ownership has been $l5O. {ln "this connection, however, it might gbe stated that Wilks does all his own irepairing. . Recently 15 new rings iwere placed in the car and other {minor adjustments made. - ! Ali of the Wilkses are mechani(:itlly included and all prefer the Chevrolet. The father of “Spark Plug’s” ;owner has had four Chevrolets. One ]S'ot' the brothers is still driving a 1917 jmodel and another brother has a 1924 imodel. : l The first threShing of the season !reported in Whitley county was done on the old J. W. C. Scott rarm near Etna. A yield of 30 bushels to the l.a(-re was reported, .

: — S & g ] : Fay Tet N : ,Sy & "l &,s- ;\ R T e o A /M/’—‘\ e e 1 ¥ RSN, | , G R fi%‘!_‘! \ & SY s A N Seiberling passenger By l] \ii 'lB FF' #7./l\ | car tire for one full Y EW '\ 555 (PR AN, | vear against further | - -/ \fl DY/ 7. & BN N 278 f | dent from any cause. | | Oy F 7 3\ w 5 AR e ”’*x%‘fof e A Vlig AT/, o /7{{ /| Put Half of It Back BV /e ut riair 01 It bac ' : NV A | ® ' Lo L;oyB : ' : e [3 { {:\,_ L2l Possibly vou have thought that Seiberling is a very high el b "/) BB\ 4 priced tire--due to its reputation for quality. ! 1 ]'\ P | 4 < 2 1 5Y L £ o | Lo | o ‘ \’\:\'fl/\ | If so, come in--see the new Seiberling - Special Service ' e :\fl/\ 4 * Balloon--bigger, thicker, tougher, and yet actually costing (G e e S | T . | o id : rdinary tires . \ ‘\\\ 9 ://,% | lgss _than you pzid a year ago for oxdinar; | ' '.':.'- \ \:\ / /,\ | ‘7\ : s : - . g 9 ‘s i . &"‘ sis 4 NNS AR /// /) Seiberling luxury carries little, if any, premuim in initial o s/ Vg cost--ard, by Lhe year, brings positive economy. You can e OSSR put half you money back in your pocket. | Ihoheasy o o . Lincoln Way West

- THE HUDSON - - HUDSOR-ESSEX SALES | l?hone ge - Ligonier, Ind. { Courtney Johnson general sales manager and a director of the Hudson Motor (Car Company sailed early this week on the Berengaria for an exteud ed tour of the ‘European continent. He’} will visit London, Berlin and Brus-. sels, where Hudson planfs are now working at capacity, and his it’merary% will include the more important distribution points on the continent. } © Hudson, manufacturers of the Greater Hudson and Essex-—the (‘.‘,~l'.u!~;j Jenger was the largest impq;‘ter of ai.&i _cylinder cars into Europe last year. Before -sailing Mr. Johnson said, “the | fact that every third car in G.reasg Britain last vear was an Essex aad that sales so far|this yvear would imli--} cate that the next figures will be evcni greater is a tribute to the pwc’isiuui standards of American m'odmftiun.? That we have been able to meét I,_hc! exacting standards demanded by the Eritish public at a favorable mu):ugh% price to meet the competition of British made cars is a tribute to _t,ha:'_' quality of Hudson and Essex cars.” l : -~ Naptha Lets Go, - f&n explosion ' wrecked the: Goldie Department store in the east sid-:-] -business section of Hammond causing a loss of $40,000. . Brick and structuval steel were hurled far into the st'reets} ‘whc‘n th‘e' entire second story of ti;»]‘ building was blown to bits. § Telephone, electric and trolley Wires in the vicinity of the explosion were torn down making the street imipassable. P : i After the explosion said by police to have been caused by a large guan_tity of naptha or gasoline, fire broke. out and burned for one ‘and one-halt hours before several fire departmerts ‘eould extinguish it, Police are in‘vestigating, . L Good Peach Crop tor Indiama, © ; Indiana peach growers, with a gor{d { ¢crop in prospect have the, further. adi vantage this 'year of' a market not fovervrm\'de(l by «(,}-em'gm_‘ frult. o 6 %(}-zlylnw]_ market specialist -of Purdue 4'l'llls'\'9'l'sity’s horticulture department Erold 55 Lawrence county growers at a ‘meeting held at the Hobbs Hawkins ‘fruit farm near Bedford, S } Gaylord explained that the Indiana :fruit usually is ready for marketing 'jus't_ after the Geogria erop and a weak demand is the result. This year, however, the southern state will put tonly 5,000 cars on the market against 17,000 last year. The situation is exDected to result in a gopd demand for l'the Hoosier product. - Lo l * Prison Methods Being Probed. i"A new query into Indiana prison ’methods developed at Newcastle with ét,he revelation that Jesse I:{i(:_hzac'ds()y, Cambridge City, under sentence of one: gti) three years for bootlegging. - had %been circulating kis own petition l'm'l ;signat'ures for clemency. . _ 1 | George R. Jeffrey, U. S district attorney, called on Judeze B . Hin'shaw, Newcastle, who had sentenced !Richardson,: and learned = that jhe'ji g!'j’u'dge knew nothing of the prisoner’s irelease. Richardson has served 'onl;\i‘ a few months of his sentence. ' g ‘Mrs. Roy Imes, who subniitted tor a Major operation in Lakeside hogpital Eat Kendallville, has returned to heri ‘home near Brimfield much improved | in health. : |

a 3B L i o ROy WAL 5 U :\;,‘;v\"“”) P A RAT AT eS R AAE N - eACE-~T W - £y 0 § = ' ~ F eé% g L : : ‘ e e ’Wr eS, ‘ F e 2 _,.3\ )\u, oo ?‘;E‘}-"?',"ff}_;f‘ TSR3 o B ol e - o / o ;r"-'“‘,"wf",‘f‘m {Q’ i o C B N i‘% ¥ ok S PR . AR T NG e e o R€ > EETT Afi»d / o EETERSY e - S ey AR : 1 S [ ot : oR M i e T @R o £oA : G WHRE R L e e ; Bly - h e L. e e BES e iet ; | _ ey ;% (a 0 . CORRR RIS RIS T i 2 ONCE more Sparton- presentsan L. o SRCREG A | . astounding radio development e g:r N 4 ... FACE-TO-FACE REALISM. lcis™ fe 0 aEaßaleimetsag ' "as great as Sparton’s other innovas .*_;«{2l.3 s 4 . tions ... the revolutionary EQUA- ‘;:‘»ij g S(J;’V.\E circuit and “Radio’s Richest B ::;-"L = Voice”. To hear the new Sparton.in- Sggtas =a7 7 struments is-to hear HUMANIZED B et egy - radio ... tecgguon,so‘ amazing that i ififf‘*;; % : ” you almost FEEL the lan% presence gy FRTRA oneRE B | ». of your entertainers, and almost SEE- - £} c'é%‘&; . them in studio or auditorium. We = ;4'%’;.‘ S Seae ) . wantyou to expericnce this-new 885, _ SSSSEEEF Y ,:gnll‘ for yourself. Ca 11... HEAR @) o= 1e new Spart . L o & ~ the new Spartons. e > . e : % NEW SPARTON - . ; EQUASONNE : . . e 7 Mool 304 : Y g : 4 . 5 5 : : i : - .. 7 - Lincoln Way West - Ligonier P I ATé AT SAR @ Y /-".a %-3 B fl ° - e ' : g » S '::'-n{-‘ -‘ifi‘w“lh’ -fik: ’;&49‘ ’ ; 3 S L UTGEYRL egley P :_;. e : 3 'A 2

AEsen - : : @é“ & !', i e , e o }ET sups 3 - LK 4N il LOFMAGNL . ’ : - R e fi B k- 2 o i * E(‘ s £ B e- & P : iOo S o ) : aa 5 ] oQ . @ “*7 ; - f y : ee ' o . For Troubles ' o d el | due to Acid . - S : | INDIGESTION - e 7 s J > } aciostomacH | . : : : HEARTBURN *§° ¢ iy = = e ADACHE |%IR £ PN GASES - NAUSEA S & & eiR oo ‘____"_,:74:_:;-—'—/ ¢ ;" .;»Z’? §4 5 LQ‘ %Sl o & ! - A\ ATt eLS §

Excess acid is the common cause of indigestion. .It results in pain and sourness about two hours after eating. The quick corrective is-an alkaki which neutralizes acid. The best corrective is Phillips’ Milk of Magnesiz. It has remained standard with physicians in the 50 years since its invention. b One spoonful of Phillips’ -Milk of Magnesia neutralizes instantly many times its volume in acid. It is harmless and tasteless and lits action is quick. You will never rely on crude methods,. never continue to suffer,

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when you lcirn how quickly, how pleasant] .this premier method acts. Clease lot it show vot—now. . Be sure o got the gefiniae Phillips’ Milk af 1l wmecia |ooseribed by physiclams for CJ yeurs o corre-ting excess acids. . 2oc and bsoc¢ a bottle—any drugstgre,. o “Millc of . Maonesia” has been ~the U. 8. Reaistercd Trade Mark of The Charles . Phillips Chemical Company and its predéccssor Charles H. Phillips gince 1875, S ST