The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 18, Vernon, Jennings County, 30 October 1919 — Page 2
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i t U !.v bo ir.i?r&.! v 4 "i t ! I a-k V It' tir,,e j oil lnun-1 r-.it wi.it is wit:,:! Kidney WMbrw often cues much mSerin? from backache, lameness". i !i".imit ij p.tm or.d k:-I..T irr"r'".ir.?. Ni'-'f-5. it t it bal to dri-ny. ctT'I cr Rrn;ht'i ! eae, but if taken in time it usually easily r rrc-f f 1 i v i:-i.!z Doan't Kidney Pills. Doan's have helped thousands. An Indiana Cais ;,frf. Wrri. J,. Gu anther, &u3 IlumMy M., L i Forte, 1 i.d . w: 'i twv jxvJ trouble with v, '-'tk kidneys for 5 ear". At tii.ien my kl'li?ey have been f;iK and I have had a f.'Mvy ache : i. 1 lameness 5n my r" kl Ineys. which has r hen so bad I could c hardly walk. My kidneys act"d irregularly, I was nervrnit and felt WMk and tired. Doan's Kldr.py Pills have always relieved these attacks." Ct Dm t Art Stora, C3 Box C3 -I 1 1 HID IX Z. T PILLS rOSTER-f.:iUlUPJI CO.. BUFFALO, n.y. Aoll f o; 5 C FIVE MILLION PEOPLE'S, USED IT LAST YEAR "'''4 CASGAflAlpCiUIMiriE tr--?jrj cr.il remedy for 25 year in tablet form sale, sure, no . opiates break up a co!d in 24 . hour relieves crip in 3 davt. Money hack if it fails. The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. II ill's picture. At At! Drag Stmrm f irj A;cny cf Rheumatism and Gout, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Chest Colds and Sore Throat Ended in Half the Time It Takes Other Remedies Mustarlno won't blister it is always ready for ut.e it's pratulmother'c oldfahloneJ mustard plaster with other up-to-d-ite pain kilters added. Tin best and utckest remedy in the world for lameness, sore r .uscles, stilt ne-k, cramps in lesr, earache, backache, i'i;tiarhe find toothache. lhH-y's Xl'istarlne ask jr it by name. Is made real, honest, yellow mustard-not chest ; substitutes. Use it freely to draw the pai; fron those sore feet it's pree.t for chifulains. too. and for fronted fpet. Ask for and pet Mustarlne a : v. .i ti the vellnw box. i 1 1 r - 1 l mm u mm sA at k A m i4 s. s h f n pk mm. m mm J w tt itf at a , H M it tf Ycu Suffer From Constipation, Upset Stomach or Inactive Liver, Give Celery King a Trial, If Ycu Want Genuine Relief and Want It Quick. It's n purely vegetable remedy, gentle ml effective, that drives Impurities from the bowels and makes you feel better right away. Drew ep of this ptea.Ttnt remedy when you catch cold, get feverish and are o-at of sorts. Use It for sick headache! to grtve you a w . t breath, clear skin and healthy eppeike. r - " " " " . - ............. .. v . -I 5h orthorns in AmericA 133 Years The flrvt ptirrbr!1 Fhnrt-h-rn ratlin wrc brought o tli. l"rl'-4 in i'.Mi. StuttH sh'pntt bemv tm-p.-rt..l r m H!'-!ai-'l to trg'tiis t f ; t yc:t Tbe hurtt!'Trt tisi ti.'i more to i t with th It ,;'rorciii"T.I of catn ia 1 1 ci'-.'.i 'rf rm any ither bre-l pniflbij' than all ether tirei'.5s. It Is t comb' r.J b'f an1 ri'.sm quai:tr Of !t; .-!uir;horn U;.U b ttinl proeta t'Vi th rf;r!(ins sti.l rsai'""i"i. It rs t ne hort- . Amt'rtr.'in Miottttorn Itreedert 3 iJeiier 1'iirk At-., 1 ? ti :;:. iU. -ei;irio tinted. -;,.! pb- f"!!.i.v idea in 1 i. ) i ru V'. -;it, orlt l.-i:---. copyright. jt.-;i t .i i"" '.1m."-! lmver"al Scenario Corp., AV. -!'-' Mutual I.ir- HhU., I. An;;, b'". Cat Countries Using "America." j t'.ivnt l'r;; .i '.'i tho air fur "Ood S.!o tli' Kin..;," ami it Ims :ii-o been J v.-'- !v tiiTinany, IJavarUi, Svit?.orl.tii'.!, I'.r'iu-u ic-k, !!::.. . r. Wurtiem- j bi'tv, rru-:;t. axi'ny, W'ihiar and j Norway an.! Fruivct4. AoeorUiuS to n J'roacli. an'l.iM'ity, llaiitl-.i o'ioi the t'.;:.c frnt a St. Oyr pr.vb'it.v, tho stui!. .:-?;;; of whiclt Is claimed fur Lul'.b-. To Have a Clear Sweet Skin. j
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Touch i'UiIes, rvdnt'ss, rougliuesa or itc!;i-, if any, witlx Cuticura Ointment, then bathe with Cuticura Soap and Lot water. Kino. Cry gently and d-it ca n little Cutiera Talcum to U avo a fcseinali: fragrance ca fiila. Everywhere 25c each. Adv. Paradoxical Sur-iress. "Have yon ir.ap.y j-ittir.s in your vnalai?" !'. ye : I l-,a e a nusnbor oi s-taDd-Ins cr."" r iornin?'; (, . ... . i w v- W "w f i 4 n - CI 3 x" t- H r ' 1 1 H V V tC.e '.. t f 'drifts Ca.C .:Jit.-4
Hoosier News Briefly Told Fred H. Pocock of Fort Wayne was elected grand high priest at the annual Convocation of the Royal Arch Masons at Indianapolis. Green castle people are not worrying over the threatened coal strike, as 80 or 90 per cent of the families have their winter's supply of coal in the bins. Mayor W. J. Black started preparations for a bi cch lra1 ion at Anderson XoAoiuber 11 in observance of the llrst anniversary of the sii-ninj of the armistice. .Mrs. Elizabeth S. Oirr of Iiiflianapolis w:is re-elected war mother for Indiana at the annual convention of tho state branch of the American War Mothers at Indianapolis. The state industrial board has decided to refuse access to certain of its records, of which it believes some representatives of workmen's compensation insurance companies have been making misuse. The receiver for the Vincennes Traction company filed with the public service commission a petition for permission to buy seven one-man street ears for S12KH) and to put them into service at Vincennes. The Indiana Power company of Vincennes, a reorganization, petitioned the public service commission to take over the Indiana Power and Water company, par for par. by the issuance of securities equal to those of the Indiana Power and Water company. Exhibitors and manufacturers at the Central States Tractor show at Evansville, voted to organize a permanent association of Indiana intctor manufacturers and dealers to co-operate with Purdue university in official tractor tests. Governor Goodrich issued a parole to Carl A. Killer of Staunton. P.iller was sentenced to the state prison to serve two to fourteen years for accepting a bribe while trustee of Posey township. Clay county. P.iller was to have been taken to prison last week. Freelandville, in Knox county, has a wireless station, erected by three hf-teen-year-old boys, Harold Sehroeder, Oscar Harding and Harold l'ielemeier. A wire ISO feet long is fastened to a barn ami reaches to the top of a water tower. The instruments used were handmade by George Hoke, fifteen. The first message received was a report from a weather bureau in West Virginia. Since then the station has picked up a number of messages. L. I'. Iiannon, age one hundred and one, is dead at the home of S. P. P.annon. his son. in liloomingdale. He had been In failing health for several weeks. Until recently Mr. Bannon retained the use of all his faculties to a remarkable degree and occasionally took part in public gatherings. For many years he was tin active pastor In his church, the Newlight denomination, and formerly was a circuit rider. Relatives and friends celebrated Mr. Ilannon's one hundredth birthday anniversary with a large gathering in October, 101 S. Prayer opened the public sale at which Frank Conwell. P.lountsville farmer, disposed of his belongings. Conwell, a recent convert at a Holy Roller meeting, admitted he had poisoned a mule and burned his home to get the insurance money. lie decided to sell out "by the will of the Lord" and may enter the ministry. One of the sale clerks was Roy Jordan, Bruntsville merchant, whose detailed '"confession" at the meeting where he "got religion" set the quiet countryside agog. The sale was the largest in point of attendance in the history of the county. A triple wedding, in which sisters were brides, took place recently at the home of John llixon. their brother, of Elkhart. Rev. C. P. Croxall of St. Paul's Methodist church performed the ceremony in tho presence of a small group of relatives. The couples were: j Mi-s Helen llixori and Raymond j P.ronse, who will live on a farm north' of Elkhart: Mi-s Sarah llixon and I Earl Ratitz. who will live at Martin, j Mich., and Miss beta llixon and Glen : Welsh,, who will llvs at Vassar. Mich. When Miss Sarah llixon announced her plans to marry, the other two coti- J j.les decided to make it a triple wed- . ding. j Ono hundred and twenty-eight cows j which have boon on test In the Warrick and Spent -er County Cow Testing ; ... t . i .. t ..,....,.1... . ! a5Soetaite.u ior i tie tai .i- iuutji iuidueed an average of G,0."0 pounds of milk and "270 pounds of hutterfat at an average feed cost of $GS.0 and a return of $2.10 for every dollar spent for feed. Fortv-four cows, or more than a third of those on test, produced j an average of 7.07o pounds of milk j and o."7 pounds of fat. The feed cot j for these select forty-four averaged i $s 1.-10, but the return was for j every dollar spent for them. They i produced an average profit of $110.70 ; per cow nzalnst an average of $7.".7r i for the entire association. Emery Pike, fifty-four years old, a prosperous farmer, shot and seriously wounded hi-: wife and then killed him.elf by thing a bullet into his heart at their -home south of llarrisburg. Mrs. Pike may recover, hospital surgeons statol. How to get to Chicago by the bosr automobile route has been simplified by the Hoc-dor State Automobile association which has completed marking the highway Into Chicago, and all the best roads from Indianapolis to Fort Wayne, through Pendleton, Anderson. Mr-ic'.e. Hartford City and Tdnffton.
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The West Wayne consolidated school building, one mile south of Warsaw, was destroyed by fire. The loss is estimated at more than $25,000 Nearly 300 Royal Arch Masons were in attendance at the annual convocation of the Indiana grand chapter of the order, which was held in Indianapolis. Corydon will have two tickets to be voted for at the corning municipal election, one known as the Citizens' ticket and the other as the People's ticket. Both are nonpartisan. Vincennes oil operators are interested in the large well completed recently in the Lawrence county field, east of that city, and it is believed deep drilling for oil will be started soon. A Perry county chapter of the American Legion was organized in Cannclton between 40 and o0 world war veterans sighing the application for a charter, which has been forwarded to state headquarters. The Central States Gas company of Vincennes was authorized by the publie service commission to increase its gas rates from a schedule -anging from !K) cents to ."0 cents net to one ranging from $1.40 to 00 cents net l.00 cubic feet. Dr. Will II. Rail, secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at Fort Benjamin Harrison, announces that the building will be closed on the last day of this month in compliance with an order of the war department (dosing all welfare organizations in army camps. At a sale of Spotted Poland-China hogs, near Kempton. .0 head were sold for a total of $14,7o0, the offerings bringing an average of $,'510. Gertsdalo, a Poland male, brought $10,000, being sold to the Minnie Taylor farm at Ilartsville. O. On account of the cost of all kinds of building materials and the continued scarcity of labor, the Goshen common council voted to abandon plans for the construction of a $100,000 city hall until such time as general building conditions are more favorable. Tlieron G. Weaver of Huntington and Everett Marler of Rockville have been appointed state oil inspectors by Dr. IT. E. Barnard, state food and drag commissioner and head of the state department of oil inspection. Both men are former soldiers and w ill ho stationed in districts in northern Indiana. Charles T. Jenkins, seventy-five years old, a prominent Republican of Hvansville. is dead at his home in Evansville after a long illness. He was born and reared in Evansville. Mr. Jenkins was city clerk of Evansville at one time and served a number of years as county recorder and county clerk of Vanderburg county. Governor Goodrich appointed Frank S. Jones of Columbus special judge to sit in the trial of Blythe Lamb, to be opened in Jasper soon. Lamb is charged with the murder of Mrs. John Rickrich of Petersburg-, Ids sister-in-law, who died after Land) .shot her, July 10. Lamb is thirty-three years old. Guy Prescott, who has been absent from Evansville for the last 13 years and who is believed by the authorities to have been with Miss Josie Gray, bookkeeper for a furniture store, before she was murdered there in 1000, has been found at Oklahoma City, Okla., according to advices received by Edgar Schmitt, chief of police. Boys between the ages of twelve and eighteen will be permitted to acquire training for entering the Improved Order of Red Men. according to n vote taken at: the session of the great council of the Improved Ordes of Red Men of Indiana held in Indianapolis. The boys will be formed into an organization known as the Junior Guards of the Improved Order of Red Men. Sergt. Louis F. Czenkush. reported killed in action in France, has returned to the home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. V. Czenkush, at South Bend. Sergeant Czenkush was wounded October o, 101S. but: through a misunderstanding was reported killed in action. A letter from his company command
er described the military funeral cef ! tho sergeant. He has been in a hospital for a year. February 20,, 1020. will be the centennial of the settlement of Indianapolis. The common council, at a recent meeting, took steps toward a formal observance of the day when it passed a resolution calling for the appointment of committees by the mayor, the school bonrO. the hoard -of trade and the chamber of commerce, to cooperate with the committee appointed by the Indiana Historical society, in arranging for a suitable celebration. Men hauling gravel from a pit near Mt. Union a few days ago. opened what are believed to be Indian graves. The skeletons of four men were found, the hones being in a good state of preservation. Nothing else was found, except part of a fiat porcelain dih about 2-j inches in diameter, on which small holes bad boon bored. History shows that at different times Indians belonging to the mini. IInron-Iroq'.:ois. Woa, Miami, Piankoshaw, Pottawatomie, Kiekapoo and Shawnee tribes lived in Parke county along the Wabash river. Charles M. Lemon, age sixty-eight, a Bedford business man known throughout the state, is dead at his home there following a brief illness. He was prominent in the nulling !usi:;ess and was a member of the Indiana Millers' association. Governor Goodrich has appointed J. E. Frederick of Kokomo a inerrrber of the commission created by the i;,-t legislature and. directed to study child welfare and social insurance. Mr. Frederick takes the place of James II. MeGHl of Valparaiso, whom the governor appointed some time ago but who declined to serve.
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Colds At once! Relief with 'Pape's Cold Compound"! The first dose eases your cold ! Don't stay stuff ed-up ! Quit blowing and snufSing! A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up a severe cold and ends all grippe misery. Relief awaits you! Open your clogged-up nostrils and the air passages of your head; stop nose running; relieve the headache, dullness, feverishness, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. "Pape's , Cold Compound" is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes nice. Contains no quiuine. Insist ca Pape's ! Adv. PLAYED JAZZ IN AIRPLANE English Band Indulged in Stunt Which Is Surely Something of an Innovation. The ultimate. American sensation has been reached in England. The brassy jazz band has taken possession of the land of its nearest competitor, the bagpipe, and its infectious jar and din prevail far and wide. A jazz band has been giving a performance near London at a Y. M. C. A. hut. where it made a tremendous hit. "Why not give the hoys a treat at ?" said one of the officers, naming a camp some 50 miles away. "Couldn't get there in time," .-aid the band leader. "What's the matter with the band flying there?" suggested Leroy Allbright, the "Y" secretary. Planes were tuned up. the jazzers piled in, ami hi close formation they flew the o0 miles, playing as they went. London Mail. "CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP" IS CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Remove poisons from stomach, liver and bowels. Accept "California" Syrup of Figs only look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love Its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each bottle. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say "California." Adv. Financial Diagnosis. In a confidential little talk to a group of medical students an eminent physician took up the extremely important matter of correct diagnosis' of the maximum fee. "The best rewards," he said, "come of course, to the established specialist. For instance. I charge $25 a call at the residence, $10 for an office consultation, and $5 for a telephone consultation." There was an appreciative and envious silence, and then a voice from the back of the amphitheater, slightly thickened, spoke : "Doc," it asked, "how much do you charge a fellow for passing you eu the street?" Chicago Journal. "KILL-JOYS Constipation, Headache, Colds, Biliousness ended with "Cascarets" Nothing takes the joy out cf life quicker than a disordered liver or waste-clogged bowels. Don't stay sick, bilious, headachy, constipated. Remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your breath bad and stomach sour. Why not spend a few cents for a box of Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest laxative-cathartic you ever experienced? Cascarets never gripe, sicken or inconvenience one like Salts. Oil, Calomel cr harsh pills. They work while you sleep. Adv. Experts to Asia Grow. Exports to Asiatic countries show large increases, the British East Indies receiving ?12.000.t'rt. Japan $rA0OO,00Q and Siberia ni,t)0,eeQ worth each.
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RED CROSS ROLL CALL. Membership Campaign Opens November 2d, Closes 11th. President Wilson, in Message Prepared Before Illness, Makes Appeal for Generous Response. Washington, D. C. In a request to the people of the United States to generously respond to the Third Red Cross Roll Call the following message was dictated by l'resident Wilson before his present illness : As president of the United States and as president of the American Red Cross I recommend and urg-e a generous response to the Third Red Cross Roll Call, which opens on November the second with the observance of Red Cross Sunday and appropriattdy closes on November the eleventh, the first anniversary of the signing of the armistice. Twenty million adults joined the Red Cross during the war, prompted by a patriotic desire to render service to their country and to the cause for which the United States was engaged in war. Our patriotism should stand the test of peace as well us the test of .war, and it is an intelligently patriotic program which the Red Cross proposes, a continuance of service to our soldiers and sailors, who look to it for many things, and a transference to the problems of peace at home of the experience and methods which it acquired during the war. . Stress on Membership. It is on membership more than money contributions that the stress of the present campaign is laid, for the Red Cross seeks to associate the people in welfare work throughout the land, especially in these communities where neither official nor unofficial proTtsion has been made for adequate public health and social service. It is in the spirit of democracy that the people should undertake their own welfare activities, and the National Red Cross wisely intends to exert upon community action a stimulating aud co-ordinating influence and to place the energies of the organization behind all sound public health and welfare agencies. The American Red Cross does not purpose indefinite prolongation of its relief work abroad, a' policy which would lay an unjust burden upon our own people and tend to undermine the self-reliance of the peoples relieved, but there is a necessary work of completion to be performed before the American Red Cross can honorably withdraw from Europe. The congress of the United States has imposed upon the Red Cross a continuing responsibility abroad by authorizing the secretary of war to transfer to the American Red Cross such surplus army medical supplies and supplementary and dietary foodstuffs now in Europe as shall not be required by the army, tor be used by the Red Cross to relieve' the distress which continues in certain countries of Europe as a result of the war. Program Deserves Support. To nuance these operations, to conclude work which was begun during the war, and to carry out some comparatively inexpensive constructive plans for assisting peoples in eastern Europe to develop their own welfare organizations, the American lied Cross requires, in addition to membership fees, a sum of money small in comparison with the gifts poured into its treasury by our generous people during the war. Both the greater enduring domestic program and the lesser temporary foreign program of the Red Cross deserve enthusiastic support, and I venture to hope that its peace-time mem-ben-ship will exceed rather than fall below its impressive war membership. WOODROW WILSON. Averse to Borrowing Trouble. Jimmy has been rather unfortunate lately in the way of minor accidents, and his mother has grown quite cautious, about his taking chances. One day lie came in and wanted to ride his tricycle down to his auntie's house. I lis mother hesitated before consenting to his request, and Jininry cut in with the comforting assurance, "Maybe there won't be a thing happen, mother, so don't make a worry for yourself till it does." Success. Life is indefinite a bundle of contradictions. We men, with our ideas, strive to give it a particular shape by melting it into a particular mold into lb rr definiteness of success. All the world conquerors, from Alexander down to the American millionaires moid themselves into a sword or mint. arKi thus find that Cists act image of themselves which is the source of their success. Rabindrrnath Tagure. Her Wish. Wee Bessie on being told that s-I:e would have to eat condensed milk on her oatmeal exclaimed, "I wish that old condensed cow would die." Boston Transcript. Fertilizers in the Netherlands. One source of the demand for fertilizers in the Netherlands that one la f.pt to overlook is the fairly extensive reclamation of waste land. The process of dyking and draining that Las won large sections of the country from the sea and its culmination in the project to drain the greater part of the Zuider Zee are well knownThen Get the Other Sid. Success Is merely a matter of luck If ycej don't believe it ask any unsuccessful man. Boston Transcript.
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INDIANA WO'IAN TELLS' OF EXPERIENCE Laporte. Ind. "Eighteen years ago I first became acquainted with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip-
tion, it was dannj expectancy ec-J I was very frail .ind J'icate. But the "Favorite Pre-cripti'.:-a strengthened rne and I had a corr.par.iV babv w-as a ?i. renz. always been fire and Z- i.1 p healthy, lor the eiXsfT vJ; peot.mt mother I think there is i;c:l.. in 5 to e'P", d 'Favorite I'rescript ion," "The 'Pleasant Pellets I keep in my xnedicine closet for immediate use and ftfl that I couldn't keen house without them."" Mrs. Minnie McGregor, 612 Clement St. COULD NOT SLEEP Lafayette, Ind. "A short time ago I was in a, terribly nervous condition k that I could not sleep at night. I would have f imply dreadful nightmares. My druggist recommended Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription to me and it helped me wonderfully . The first half bottle cured me of ray nervousness and made tae ablf to sleep at night just as quiet as a child. It also relieved me of periodical suffering which used to bother me a great deal. Dr. Pierce s Favorite Prescription, ia a grand tonic for women and I do not hesitate to recommend it." Mrs. Charles Coleman, 631 Ferry St. Frankfort. Ind. "When living in Kirkersvii'.e. Ohio, I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I was alwavs cornplaininsr. Nervousness troubled me. caused. I think, by woman's weakness. This medicine wa recommended to me and I thought I would try it. I found results good: it certainly helped me. I will recommend it to anybody." Mrs. Carrie Headlee, 451 E. Earner St. W omen who are worn out, who are nervous or dizzy at times, should take" that reliable temperance, herbal tonic. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, in beuid or in tablet?. Send Dr. Pierce's Invalid Hotel, Buffalo, X. Y., 20 cents for trial package. Li L J. J Li U UUliuLu Caused by id Jt W Id :s That bitter heartburn, belching:, foodrepeating, indigestion, bloat alter eating . U are caused by acid-stomach. But thfjr are only firt symptom danger signals to warn you of awful troubles if not stopped. Headache, biliousness, rheumatism, sciatica, that tired, listless feeling, lack of enersy, fiiziiness, insomnia, even cancer and ulcers cf the Intestines and manv othT ailments are traceable to ACID-STOMACH. Thousands yes. millions of people who ougrht to be well and strong are mere weaklings because of acid-stomach. They really starve In the midst of plenty because they ua not pet enouirh strength and vitality from the food they eat. Take EATOXIC and pive your stomach a chance to do its work riisht. Make it ptroner, cool, sweet and comfortable. EATONIC brings quick relief for heartburn, belching-, indigestion and other stomach miseries. Improves digestion helps ycu get full strensrth from your food. Thousands say EATONIC the most wonderful stomach remedy In the world. Brought them relief when everything else failed. Our best testimonial is what EATOXIC will do for you. So get a big SOc box of KATOXIC today from your drusrgist, use It five, days if you're not pleased, return It and tret your money back. l-73 CTcii YGUxl ACIP-STO. ttC'Q il f t I I) ' 5 &&&& - .nca. i . I," NR Tablets tone and strengthen I V organs of digestion end ellmina tion, improve appetite, stop sick 1 headaches, relieve biliousness, l correct constipation. They act j promptly, pleasantly, mildly, yet 1 1 tnorougbly. ) O Tord-lt,TccrK5wAHLt ; t Get Sc Box. i i ' ,1 f j r a -. ' ' ; a SCRAP chew m laj ur xorm f f if p 'iibiji f "m rm if $ 4 QjC'A'tLfcgA Cr 1 3 Every room is an outide room, with hot and cclJ wsler. ! The f!ight Hotel cf .e Right Priczs. I RATZ5: I I ft.00.ndti.2S e ! W4h E!h J1-S.J nd J2.C3 Your Best Asset A Skin Cleared By V-rf Li LI w KnS!Tmr Sob"". n'T-ie-? SB TV-i-3 j -Tiler f :u I cor - "a"i-i If c- ;cr J. tim ma tndw acd t-.e-tn.esi mmay twit ims giveamatixjjictisaiormftretliaatiiy jrearm
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