Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 27, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 3 March 1921 — Page 3

jp^gnoij Aspirin

Then it is Genuine Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 2i years and proved safe by millions. Accept only an “unbroken package” of “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper directions for Colds, Pain, Toothache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago. Handy tin boxee ot 12 tablets coat but a fear cento—Largo- packages. 'Jaeartn Is the Mi ast mi Barer Maastastara ml Moaectlimbln>r mi laJlarllaaei

Mankind la divided Into two classee •—those who drive autos and those Who dodge them. Never argue with a wasp; It always carries its point

DETROIT MAN TELLS HOW TO STOP STOMACH TROUBLES EASY

He Had Indigestion, Headaches, Poor Appetite and Nervous Spells. TELLS HOW HE CURED HIMSELF “1 suffered with Indigestion tor a long time. What little I did eat would form gas In my stomach and cause bloated, uncomfortable spells for an hour or more after meals. Then I’d have headaches, too. Then when night would cotne I’d lay there unable to sleep, so nervous I couldn’t lay still. You can Imagine how badly I felt mornings, and I was actually getting weak and thin and pale and felt bad. “Then one day a friend told me how he got rid of troubles Just like mine. He told me how good he felt. How easy It was to feel like your old self, and so I took his advice. Today, after using that medicine only a little while I am a well man and completely cured. Since I found out how I’ve

When Children are Sickly

are Constipated, Feverish, Cry out in their sleep, Take oold easily, Have Headaches, Stomach or Bowel trouble, Try MOTHER CRAY’S SWEET POWDERS “ FOR CHILDREN

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They ere pleasant to take and a certain relief. They act on the Stomach, Liver and Bowela and tend to correct intestinal disorders. 10,000 testimonials from mothers and friends of little ones telling of relief. No mother should be withont a box of Mother Gray’s. Sweet Powders for use when needed. Aik to-day. At Druggists, The need of them often comes at inconvenient hours, (/sod by Mother a for over thirty yeara. Do Not Accept Any Substitute lor MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS.

HIGHEST ORDER OF SNOBBERY Alleged Prayer Made by English Divine Would Have Made Great Hit With Thackeray. A reporter, gathering material for a Sunday “special on “Why Churches Are Empty," palled on Bishop Leonard of Cleveland. “I don’t admit that our churches are empty,” Bishop Leonard said. “Certainly the churches that are really democratic, really Christian, are full. Os course, we have a few that cater to the rich. In these a certain number of vacant pews are to be found. ■ ■ “ "The kind of church I am referlng to abounded In England in Queen Victoria’s day. There's a story about one’ such church. It was In the domain of a certain baronet and the vicar used to conclude his Sunday piayer in this wise: "‘God bless Sir Peter; God bless also her denr ladyship; bless the tender youth of the two ladies likewise. '.We would furthermore unite in beseeching Thee, O Lord,- to have mercy on the poor governess and all the miserable sinners of this parish. Amen/ ” A Mind Reader. “Are you Doctor Smith?” 4r?\ “No, but F know where We can get some." . Father Time is no gallant; he always tells on a woman.

'JAe Choice Parts of Selected Grains give to Grape-Nuts its health and body-building value This wheat and malted barley food is so processed and baked that the nourishing qualities and pleas* - ing flavor are fully brought out Healthful-Satisfying -There's a Reason ’

Luckily It’s Impossible for a woman to tell the difference between her flrei born and a genius. A spinster Is a woman who tries tn believe she is a man hater.

told lots of friends, and they swear by Earle’s Hypo-Cod, too. You can get It down at the drug store, and It’s a nice tasting tonic, too. I’m never bloated after meals, and have a big appetite. I eat anything I want witfiout fear and feel like life Is worth living. It built me up, too, and I sleet? and feel fine all the time," declared Edwin T. Rablen, 3009 St. Jean Ave., Detroit Thousands of people have founds It Is easy to feel tip-top all the time, eat big, hearty meals and get the good out of their food. They never are rest-less-at night They always feel O. K. In the morning. Build yourself up like they have with Earle's Hypo-Cod, which Is a newer, more modern and powerful preparation. Hypo-Cod does the work quickly and Is nice to take, too. Each bottle hears name Earle Chemllcal Cos., Wheeling, W. Va., which Is a guarantee of finest quality In medicine. Drop In at the drug store and get a bottle of Earle's Hypo-Cod tonight. The cost Is trifling, If you have such troubles and want to get rid of them now.—Adv,

SAW THINGS IN NEW LIGHT Object Lesson Giveh Prisoner Altered His Determination to End Life by Rope. - In a certain prison there have been several attempts to commit suicide This desire to die has given the wardens much trouble and anxiety. A few days ago a warden entered a cell to find the Inmate preparing to hang himself. He was standing on his stool and trying to throw the end ol a strip of torn blanket around one ol the cell bars. The other end was around fils neck. “You’re making a mess of it," said the weary warden. “Let me help you.” In a trice the blanket rope war about the bar,gn£ the noose properly fixed. - The warden gave a tug. He tugged and tugged until the man was raised from the stool—until he was standinj on air. There he was held uptll hii eyes and hands made eloquent appeal for release. “That's the way," said the warden; releasing him. “Now try It yourself.’ But the prisoner has not tried It He had_ decided to Uvq*. , Simple Explanation. “Dorothy, whatever makes you tall so much?” “Because I always fink of sumptfi’ to say.” “ 7 Some folks act as If they were at tending a continuous funeral servlet

LOWER CALIFORNIA Communication makes for civilization. The airplane promises to make accessible many hitherto obscure regions, not along main lines of steamer or railway travel. For example, the average American had little reason heretofore to go to Lower California. Recently, however, this peninsula has been the resting place for airplanes In flights from the Pacific coast of the United States to the Panama Canal. Frederick Simpich writes to the National Geographic society as follows: “The long, boot-shnped peninsula that swings down-off the left-hand corner of the United States belongs to Mexico and Is known on Mexican maps as ‘Baja,’ or Lower California. Early Spanish maps of America showed California as an Island, due, no doubt, to limited explorations of this peninsula. “Scantily known as It Is to the average American, this 800-mlle-long strip of rocks, peaks, brush-grown mesas, and rare, fertile little valleys Is a favorite haunt for many Yankee naturalists, fishermen, and big-game hunters; and here and there, In the mere-favored, well-watered, grassy spots cAfctjlll higher ranges, hardy AmerlcfiSfcattlemen have built their adobe homes, where they enjoy the limitless freedom of vast unfenced areas. The Circle Bar company of Ojos Negros Ranch runs cattle over a leased territory of two and a half million acres, and a British corporation holds title to something like fifteen million acres. “Away down at peaceful, picturesque La Paz, where Cortez repaired his schooners and where, centuries later, Walker, the Yankee filibuster, raised his flag, another Yankee today runs busy little tannery, turning out 600 sides of good leather every day, for an American shoe factory. Here and there, in hill and valley, Americans are delving for metals or growing the staple frljole. “But the country as a whole, owing to Its many desert, waterless areas, Is but sparsely settled, and, as one writer says, ‘ln all Its turbulent, romantic history, since the halcyon days when Sir Francis Drake dropped his pirate anchor In Magdalena Bay, no wheeled vehicle has traversed Its rough and tortuous length.’ “Rich as are Its mines and fat as are Its herds of cattle, Its chief source of Wealth lies In the cottongrowing regions around Mexicali:' “At the Colorado delta, at the head of the Gulf of California, which separates the Lower California peninsula from Sonora, more than at any other: point on the whole border, tiff interests of the Unltqd States ,and of Mexico are closely joined. This Is due to the singular topography of that region (part of It is below sea-level) and to the diversion of water from the Colorado river. In the opinion of many Irrigation engineers and political students, this peculiarly delicate problem of-Irrigation and water rights, as between planters on the American and Mexican sides of the .line, respectively, can be solved satisfactorily - only - by some Joint treaty between the two republics. Involving either the fixing of a~ neutral zone or the sale of a small strip of territory.”

WILL ELEPHANTS GO THE WAY OF BUFFALOES? ' Will the African elephants soqn hatte to be protected, as are buffaloes in the' United States, .lest they- become extinct? The peaceful progress ■of farming is the menace J which the elephant faces. Already the South African Cape council has decided to exterminate the elephants because they despoil ’crops and sometimes kill agricultural laborers. Sir Harry Johnston, famous African authority, tells of his experience with African elephants in a communication to the National Geographic society: "If, after many years of trials, the African elephant Is pronounced to be hopeless as a domestic animal (and it should be remembered that most male African elephants In -captivity have shown themselves to be hoplessly savage), then at least for Its magnificent Ivory the creature Is worth preserving as an asset to the ■ state. If the Indian elephant shows himself to he tnoro docile Ihnp the Afrtcan elephant, It must be remembered, on the other hand, that he Is of very, little value for his Ivory. "One day a baby elephant was presented to me by an Uganda chief. It Is a sad thing to relate, hut three men were killed in attempting to capture the first elephant. I had expressed a wish one day for .some elephants to experiment with in domestication, and the natives, with their usual desire to please me, were so ardent In their determination to gratify my wish and so determined in their pursuit of the young elephant that the mother elephant knocked over and killed three of them. But finally they succceeded In their object, capturing the calf, and to my great surprise It trotted Into amu behind nno of the merr. JAP STATESMEN IN DILEMMA "üblic Opinion Opposes, and America Demands, the Punishment of Langdon’s Slayer. Tokyo.—The American government ecently urged the Japanese government to expedite its reply to the note •Concerning the killing by a Japanese .entry of Lieut. Warren H. Langdon of thd"cruiser Albany In Vladivostok. The Yoml Uri Shimtrun declares that |be army authorities and the foreign

THE jJAPPANEE ADVANCEMENTS

“This little creature was at'the time only four feet high. In two-day* It had become perfectly tame, and would follow a human being as readily as his own mother. It was easy enough to feed him with milk, because all that was required was a bottle with a long neck. This bottle was filled with cow’s milk diluted with water, and poured down the elephant's throat. Soon all that one had to do wns replace the speck bf the bottle In the elephant's mouth, and the Intelligent creature wound Ita trunk around the neck of the bottle, tilted It up, and absorbed the contents. Fer several weeks the elephant throve and became a most delightful pet. It would allow any one to ride on Its back, and seemed to take pleasure and amusement In this exercise. It would find Its way through diverse passages Into my sitting room, not upsetting or Injuring anything, but deftly smelling and examining objects of curiosity with Its trunk. “At the same time we had In captivity a young zebra, which was also to be the pioneer of a domesticated striped horse. These two orphans, the elephant and the zebra, became greatly attached to each other, though per- • haps there was more enthusiastic affection on the part of the elephant, the zebra, at times, getting a little bored with constant emtuacga.. Alas and alack I both elephant and zebra died eventually from the unwholesomeness, to them, Os cow's mtlk.”

MALMEDY: WALLOON ISLE RELINQUISHED BY PRUSSIA In patching together the picture puzzle of European nations to fit more nearly racial and historical units the peace conference commission on Belgian claims approved Belgium's demand for Malmedy. Malmedy long formed one of those alien racial clusters that seem to cling like barnacles to many a European boundary line. In the case of Malmedy and the region about that town a group or Walloons was left In Ithenish Prussia when the historic Benedictine Abbey of Stavelot-Malmedy was cut in two in 1815. Malmedy fell to Prussia, while six miles to the west, across the pre-war Belgian border, Is Stavelot The latter town was the seat of the abbey which was independent until the Lunevllle peace of 1801. The abbey fell to France until its partition 14 years later. The abbey was founded In the Seventh century and later Its abbots ranked as princ.es. They ruled many small villages along the Ambleve, on which Stavelot is situated, and along the Warche, which flows through Malmedy. Charles Martel, grandfather of Charlemagne, who ruled the. Pranks while he let their kings reign on, won a decisive victory over Neustrla at Stavelot 1200 years ago. Malmedy lies In a pretty valley of the afore-mentioned river, 20 miles south of .Atx-la-Chapelle. The town had less than 5,000 population before the was. Dyeing, paper-making and tanning were its Industries; The term Walloon Is used to designate those Belgians who speak either French or a-French dialect. The Walloons of Belgium desired Mnlmedy's restoration for lingual, ns well as for sentimental reasons. In Liege and Namur a movement for the revival of Walloon as a literary language—for It had been so used until about the fifteenth century—was well under way when the war fiegnn. In the midst of German speaking neighbors Malmedy and Its environs preserved the old Walloon dialect, whereas among many Belgian Walloons It has been supplante'd by pure French. *

THE STRAITS OF MESSINA Between the rocky masses of Sicily and the “toe" of the- Italian penin,: •sula, there Is hut a narrow lane of sea, known ns the Straits of Messina. Yet this ribbon— of water might he ocean-wide, Judged by the diverse civilizations of Italy and Its island neighbor. The Sicilian and Italian hanks, which 'border the Strains of Messina for nearly 25 miles to the east and west, are among the most luxuriant to be found In a cruise of the Mediterranean.-Mag-nificent golden groves of lemon and orange, and orchards of pomegranate, with .their brilliant red fruit, contruSt wonderfully with the flowers of the' almond trees wbiefi perfume the whole region. The straltS are entered from the Tyrrhenian sea, on the north, at the narrowest point,.the distance between Punta del Faro on the Sicilian shore and the mainland lighthouse on Punta Pezzo being not more than two miles. The whole of the Calabrian const is thickly sown with villages, sojae clinging to the beach, while othSfs ‘clamber up the sides tis the well-wooded hills Which culminate in the towering Montalto, rising to an elevation of more than a mile above the Tea. Beyond the straits to the southwest, looms ever-threatening Etna, the highest volcano In Europe. —; , The most important city situated on the straits Is the once magnificent seaport of Messina, which boasted a population of 150.000 inhabitants before “the world's most cruel earthquake” of December, 28, 1903, tossed nearly a hundred thousand lives away. The harbor'of Messina Is the" largest and safest in the. kingdom of Italy, with a depth of more than (50 fathoms. Before the great calamity It was visited annually by more than 8.000 vessels which brought cargoes office entertain dissenting views on the subject Discussing the government's position, the m wspaper thinks It would be difficult for the court-martial to punish the sentry because his action calls for no ; unishmenL Moreover, It says, his punishment would result In an outburst of national feeling. On the other hand if the sentry Is not condemned It will place the government In the position of Ignoring the demands of the United States, the Yoml Url adds. “Both the war and foreign offices

of wheat, cotton, wool and hard war*, and took nway In exchange lemons, oranges, almonds, wines, olive oil and silks. Homer-dld not accord a definite habitation for his ‘ terrible sea-creatures, Scylla and Charybdls, but mariners familiar with the perils of the rocks on the Italian side ol the straits and with the strong eddies near the harbor of Messina, saw In the mythical monsters an explanation of such dangers. Scylla was supposed to be a horrible creature with six heads andv a foozen feet, who barked like a dog. She dwelt In a lofty cave from which she rtfshed whenever a ship tried to pass heneath, and she would snatcW the unlucky seamen from the rigging or as they stood at the helm endeavoring to guide their vessels through the perilous passage! Charyhdls dwelt under a rook only a bowshot uway, on -the opposite shore. The second creature sucked In and blew out seawater three times a day, and woe to the ship caught In the maelstrom of Its mouth!

u —- • NEW REBELLION IN GARDEN OF EDEN “Mesopotamia, Upper and Lower, vies with Egypt In claiming the honor of being the home of ancient civilization,” says a bulletin of the National Geographic society, quoting from several communications concerning the land of Adam and Eve where the British recently sent more troops because of native uprisings. “Mesopotamia comprises the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Here flourished the Chaldean, Babylonian, and Assyrian empires. The city of Bagdad* with all Its glamor of mystery and magic, is In the heart of Mesopotamia. “This was the richest land In the world, the granary of the ancients; yet, In spite of all that It has been, It today lies largely waste, the desert sands have encroached upon the fertile fields, while the clogged canals have turned other portions Into swamps and marshes. “What population there Is —not more than one million —Is bf Arab origin and the Arabic language Is spoken throughout. There is, in fact, a very distinct dividing line between the Arabic and the Turkish-speaking por'ions of the former Ottoman empire. This boundary corresponds with the line of the Bagdad railway from the Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf. It 4s for the exploitation of this rich land of Mesopotamia that the famous Bagdad line was built. “Syria closes the east end of the Mediterranean and Is bounded on the north by the Tnurus mountains. The Syrian and Arabian deserts limit further settlement to the east and south. But in connection with world com-

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In the Date Gardens of Bagdad. merce It (Syria) has always been closely’ related to the "fertile valleyi of the~NHe. and the twin Mesopotafnianriversl, and its' commercial life ofLomorrow cannot be divorced from that of Mesopotamia. “Mesopotamia is as fertile today as when It was the birthplace ol human history and when the civilization" that developed there had only the Nile valley as a competitive field “Various factors delayed the Inevitable reopening of the historic trade route across Syria and Mesopotamia In modern times. “Nowhere, however, did trade fol low the railway to a. greater extent than along the Bagdad line, and In the sprint; of 1914 Aleppo was a thriving comnffel’clal center of German trade. At the hotels engineers and merchants crowded the dining rooms and talked of a mighty future in Mesopotamia That summer, war came, and the burning questipn of styles was rapidly succeeded by one of food enough tc keep body and soul together. "Fifty miles .west of Bagdad, along the Euphrates, lies the region now commonly regarded as the Garden of Eden. To Irrigate this Eden and tc reclaim millions of fertile acres around Bagdad frag tile stupendous task to which the Turkish government addressed Itself. “At Mussayeh. on the Euphrates, a pre-war traveler saw 4,000 Arabs digging like moles in the Babylonian plain, making anew channel for the river. In the dry bed of this artificial ,channel an enormous 4am was butlt. "Nebuchadnezzar's vast Irrigation system, which once watered all Babylonia, can still he easily traced for miles about Bagdad; One giant Canal, the Narawn, runs parallel with the Tigris for nearly 300 milts; it is 350 feet wide, and all about It the takeofT and laterals may still be Identified. Herodotus said he found a ‘forest of verdure from end to end' when he vllted Mesopotamia.” are inclined strongly to Insist on the reasonableness of the sentry’s attitude from the standpoint that the policing right In Vladivostok was Intrusted to the Japanese army by the consular body there,” the newspaper says, “as the United States holds that she did not entrust such a right to the Japanese, however, Japan Is obliged to treat the question of policing and the shooting as separate and distinct.” | 1 When the statue Venus tie Medici was found It was in thirteen niectio. '

TRAINED NURSE TELLS WHAT TO USEJR COUGHS Easily and Quickly Made at Home—You Can’t Help But Like It. Elizabeth McLannn says: “While hunting In Indiana last winter I took a severe cold which got the best of me. I got no relief until I used Glnndo Pine. It was the only thing that did me any good.” Glando Pine Is a highly concentrated cough compound which you get of your druggist Add to It enough syrup to make a pint and you will have a family supply of the best cough medicine you ever used. It tastes well and can be safely given tq joung children. Nothing better for croup. A dose' or two when the croupy cough begins and your trouble Is over. Coughs, hoarseness, sore throat and bronchial trouble are. quickly relieved by using Glando Pine. The cost Is so little. Enough for a pint only 60 cents. Directions go with each bottle, 'tfhe Gland-Aid Cos„ Port Wayne, Ind. —Adv. Many old frontier saloons In the West are being rebuilt Into pursonages and churches. WOMEN! USE “DIAMOND DYES” Dye Old Skirts, Dresses, Waists, Coats, Btockings, Draperies— Everything. , Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains easy directions for dyeing any article of wool, silk, cotton, linen, or mixed goods. Beware I Poor dye streaks, spots, fades, and ruins material by giving It a “dyed-look.” Buy “Diamond byes” only. Druggist has Color Card. —Adv.

A golf tournament for one-armed players was a novelty staged recently by a club In Paris. A "Hundred Thousand Dollar Invitation." The Montgomery County Farm Bureau has nothing to sell but OPPORTUNITY. We are spending ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS Inviting farmers to Investigate this great county In the Lime Land Belt. We offer rich soils, cheap land values and low tax rates and we have excellent highways, splendid Consolidated Rural Schools, good railroad facilities and markets and a splendid opportunity for the Dairy and Live Stock Farmer. For full particulars and descriptive literature, write: Montgomery County Farm Bureau, Division (I), 215-10 Bell Bldg., Montgomery, Alabama.—-Adv. The great dome of St Paul’s cathedral, London, Is supported on eight underground piers. Important to Mothera Examine carefully every- bdttle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy tor infants and children, and see thut It •szzatM&ssr In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Nothing New. Knicker ltussiu has abolished money. Booker —That's nothing; my wife abolishes mine. Good health cannot be-maintained where there is a constipated habit. Garfield Tea overcomes constipation.—Adv. Never to Be Trusted. “Political promises," remarked Senator Sorghum, “remind me of the three wishes a fairy grants In the story hooks. There’s always,.a ‘ketch’ In 'em somewhere.” For your daughter’s sake, use Red Cross Ball Blue In the laundry. She will then- have that dainty, well-groom-ed appearance that girls admire. sc. - -■ —,—i....—-, —— - . ■>. Better Convert the Enemy. Any business act which nets one friend and one enemy is a had proposition.- For the enemy can accomplish more harm as a knocker than the friend can. do as a press agent or booster. —The Nation’s Business. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Catarrhal Deafness requires constitutional treatment HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness Is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when.lt is entirely closed, Deafness Is the result Unless the inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may be destroyed forever: HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE acts through the blood on the mucous surfaces of the system, thus reducing the Inflammation and restoring normal conditions. Circulars free. All Druggists. F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, Ohio. Vanity In ’Animal's Custom. The Investigating scientist who has been studying wild animals has leHrned that members of the feline tribe do not play*wlth their long daws on the bark of trees to sharpen them, as is popularly supposed, hut the antlds nre a display of vanity on the part of the mule, to show how agile and powerful he is. . . ,

Kill That Cold With CASCARA E> QUININE FOR AND , Colds, Cough* 'OM“ ti Grippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous Tk. no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for tha first tneexs. Breaks up a cold in 24 hours Relieves . * Grippe in 3 dayd 1 — Excellent for Headache Quinine In this form does not afiect the head—Cascsrs la best Toni* Laxative —No Opiate in Hill’s. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT

Coiild not Move

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6a Bend, Ind.—“ Not only do I recommend Dr Pierce’* Favorite Prescription on ray own accountbutmy 1 • later was brought through a •lege of sick ness (at the

age of 16) by this very medicine. She was so ill that she could not move from her chair, and her Buffering a* times was terrible. Tfie doctors had given her up when my mother gave her the ‘Favorite Prescription’ and It helped her at once and eventually cured her' of her ailment ” —Mr® Helen Bennett, 617% Wenger 81

Where Small Savings Count. Small savings are like stones In ’ bridge; they fonn a firm support to carry one over the flood of an emag gency. RUB RHEUMATIC PAIN FROM ACHING JOINTS Rub Pain right out with small trial bottle of old “St. Jacobs Oil.’.* Stoji “dosing” Rheumatism. It’s pain only; not one case In flftj requires Internal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobs OH’ right on the “tender spot,” and by th* time you say Jack Robinson—out comes the rheumatic pain and dlstres* “St. Jacob’s Oil” Is a harmless rhea mntism liniment which never disa(> points and' doesn’t hum thFskTn. It takes pain, soreness and stiffness from aching Joints, muscles and bones; stops sciatica, lumbago, backache and neuralgia. Limber up! Get a small trial bottls of old-time, honest “St. Jacobs Oil" from any drug store, and In a moment you’ll be free from pains, aches and stiffness. Don’t suffer I Rub rheum* tism away.—Adv. How to Be Popular. To be really popular you must allow people to tell you things that, you al ready know, as if you had never heard of them.—Dearborn Independent.

Sure Relief E Ll-AN 3 Sure Relief RE LL-ANS Wfor indigestion

Women* Made Young Bright eyes, a dear skin and a body full of youth and health may b yours if you will keep your systenj in order by regularly taking COLD MEDAL Tbs world's standard remedy for kidnayv liver, bladder and uric acid troubles, thw enemies of liie and looks. In use sinew 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Look for the name Gold Medal on ovary UW and accept no imitation

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SWEETENS THE STOMACH Tones the Liver, Flushes the Kidney# Bulgarian Blood Tea taken hot at bedtime kills colds, guard against “FLU,” grippe and pneumonia Sold by druggists and grocers everywhere

U| "DODD’S KIDNEY PILLS H 11*1 are a wonderful medicine for || kidney trouble. I used them njj about 15 year* ago and they. jjjyji completely relieved me. My jpt fir daughter used them recently ill JByi and they greatly benefited her. |fljf IjW; I can certainly praise them.” HI THOMAS TOMLIN, jg>. Knowlton, Ky. gy H | Ask your druggist or order IBs direct from Dodd’a Medicine Cos., MB Buffalo, N. Y. Only 600 and nM Guaranteed. IK|

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