The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 40, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 January 1924 — Page 2
for jjrther Johns Medicine was written ■UHF f' f6B wears aqo | r ' UreaWST I 3 1 1 [g I I y Bodq Builder u ii IRS^-j-" /; KEEFWQ WELL An M? T.bJ«t (a vegatabla aperient) taken at «sl<ht will help keep you well, by _. toning and strengthening your dlgeettoa and elimination. / •n • j -- XS*BOX Chips off +he Old Block M JURIOWS—LittIe Ma One-third the regular do**. Made of the name ingrediecta. then caoiy , eoeted. For children and adulta. ■mb SOLO BY YOUR DBUQGIBYwJ RADIUM—SIO WILL KKJUVKNATK VOC Why aulTer from rheumatism. neuntlh. broa- ’ ehitla. lumbago, indigestion, poor blood circulation. high blood preaaura ki lney. liver ot stomach troubles, or prematurely aztnc of tnan? Our guaranteed Kltpaln Radium t’adi have relieved thousands thus affiirted The> will relieve you. If you desire relief. vrlt< today. Upon receipt of money order for 110 together with the history of your trouble, w« will mail you promptly our guaranteed KU pain- Radium Pad exh rompMe Instructions for tie use This appliance will never become elhauMed by use. with care yrlll last a life time. / always ready for W»e tor the entire family »h»n needed. Address KIIFAIh-RADtIM FROIXmt CO. 4M Mining Karhange Bldg Denver, Colo ■ g .„___- 1 , , CuticuraSoap SHAVES Without Mug Cottars Sa*p to Um t * write fer «as ety nu or *h* vtng
Quiet Evening*. “Yes, your honor," said the aggrieved woman, an she dabbed her eyes, "he neglected me shamefully. Why, he never was at home." "And I suppose you had to spend your evenlngw all by yourself: with no companionship whatever?” “W-w-well." she sobbed. "I had two goldfish." MOTHER! GIVE SICK BABY “CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP” Ha rm! see Laxative to Clean Liver and Bowels of Baby or Child.
X
Even constipated. bilious, feverish. or sick, colic Babies and Children love to take genuine “California Fig Syrup" No other laxative regulates the tender little bowels to nicely. It*' sweetens the
stomach and Marts the liver and bowels acting without griping. Contains nn narcotics or soothing drugs. Say “California" to your druggl’t and avoid counterfeits! Insist upon genuine “California Fig Syrup" which contains directions. —Advert!semenL Lives in the Mud. Some fish are very particular tn regard to the purity of the water in which they live, says Nature Magazine, but not so the catfish, for It will live and thrive in the muddiest and most stagnant waters. If the air supply of the water becomes Insufficient It will rise to the surface and take In air through the mouth. For’ your daughter's sake, use Red Cross Ball Blue in the laundry. She will then have that dainty, well-groomed appearance • that , girls admire—Ad vertlseiuent. A man who only wants to be a good fellow values smiles highly. r«r sp»«ita and •Ceetiv* acOnn. Dr. Pe«-v‘» "I’Md. Shot" SAa no «n*l A litsaM fiMi cleans -ut Worm* or Tapeworm. »T» Pear! St. W T. Adv. It requires introspection for a man to realise his own faults. Sure Relief i FOR INDIGESTION J f Belvams / Hot water Sure Relief Bella ns £S<AM 75< MCMGES EVERYWHERE Kemps W. N. U, FORT WAYNE, 7*o 3-1924
Diamonds of Malopo
THE GIRL SYNOPSIS. — Wlnton Gajrett, twenty-five and justout of college, calls by appointment on Archie Garrett, his New *ork cousin and executor, to receive hie inheritance of 1100,000- Archie, honest, an easy markand a fool for luck, asaures Winton that he is practically a alre. as he has invested all but >lO 000 in a rubber plantation tn either the East or West Indies and in a controlling interest in the Big Malopo diamond mine, somewhere or other in South Africa, sold him as a special favor or a Dutch promoter namea De Witt.
CHAPTER H Sheila Seaton. Taungs—one hundred miles from no vhere— sizzled at eight o’clock in the uorning, though It had shivered an lour before in the rarefied air of the iesert. The little station on the long uilroad line that runs from Cape Town lorthward Into the heart of heathenlorn looked forlorn indeed, set down n the middle of the scorching sands, , •oated, like a mangy dog, with patches ; if stubbly grass that would not show ;reen until the annual rains. Winton got down rrom the train, coli ected his naggage, and watched the > ! -ngine go snorting down to the water Lank. He looked about him with the | •urioslty of one new to the life of | 3ecbuanaland, which had seemed comH.unded. during the northward J»urjey, of ragged negroes, farmers with ikinny oxen, heat, flies, sand, and .warming piccaninnies. He say an array of single-story brick souses, with corrugated iron roofs that ?nve the sun glare for glare. There *ere also huts of wattle and daub, md tents pitched on lots in the heart I>f the town. The market square was illed with cumbrous, white-topped wagons, before which many pairs of * wen chewed and winked away the j lies, still harnessed on either side of .he wagon tongue. Every house seemed a store, and every store appeared to be dedicated to the sale of ild clothes and Junk; in front of them jangs at natives In loin-cloths, with -.altered, filthy blankets about their ihoulderK were chaffering In a dozen lifferent dialects with the proprietors. Taungs looked the dirtiest, meanest dace that Winton had ever seen. He i wished that It were possible to s take it jp with the implement of the same! : name and bury it. He was sure that it I would not be terribly missed. He was ! <lad that he was to take the morning stage across the desert for Malopo. He hoped earnestly that Malopo looked letter than Taungs. A drunken native, wearing a k>ln- | cloth and a naval officer’s, second-hand •oat, which he had Just purchased, and arrying a knobkerrie, which is the I<K* •al equivalent of the shillaiah. lurched by. A white man on the platform, taking a dislike to him, kicked him into I the road and sauntered on. Winton’s ■ Heart warmed toward bis Caucasian brother. He accosted him. !, “Will you kindly tell me where the ■ ,x»ach office liF he asked. ; “Just arrived up-country and bound ’for Malopo." answered the white man, j nnt in question, but as the result of I tils analysis of Winton. He took him by the arm and pointed up the principal street. “You’ll find Zeiden’s hotel fight at the end." he said. “You can’t miss it It’s by the garbage heap. He wants a '■ ' Il jJhk' l ku ‘ ,Peet ' A Xfe ;>'••■ KSI Mid Uhnton • 1 lb pound a day, but you can beat him . down to five pounds a week. Better get your board by the week.” “Why?” inuired Winton. “Because you won't start for Malopo under a week, unless you hoof it or: go by aryoplane." , “Travel pretty brisk?” asked Winton. "Look here, young feller, if your hair was a little shorter I’d ask you when you came off the breakwater. Where have you been living if you don’t know j that men are rushing to Malopo from ail parts of the country?" “I only landed last week." said Winton. trying to be diplomatic. “Has there been a big strike of diamonds there?" “Big strike, Mr. Van Winkle? Ob, noI Just a middling one. Only a hundred thousand pounds’ worth of stones taken out since Saturday, excluding the ninety-five-carat De Witt pebble! That’s nothing to men like us, eh? We don't trouble about little things like that" Winton gulped, but managed to retain an aspect of tolerable Indifference. “Did the De Witt stone happen to come out of the Big Malopo claim r he teguiied. “Look here, young man, you know more than you’re pretending," answered the other in disgust. “Think you’re smart, don’t yen? I don’t know what your game is. but take a word of advice and don’t play innocent in Malopo, because it don’t go down 1“ Be left Winton in disgust and saun- •
By VICTOR ROUSSEAU Cepyzight kv W. G. Chaamaa
terrd back, only pavsfhg to kick the native, who had the misfortune to Intercept him, back into the road again. Winton saw the situation, as he thought, precisely. If bls claim had actually proved valuable. De Witt, who had unloaded the shares upon the unsuspecting Archie, must be kicking himself savagely at that moment. He resolved to be very cautious and to say nothing to anybody about his business. He learned the location of the coach office from the station agent, and strolled across the. market square toward it. stepping among the recumbent oxen. Now he began to perceive signs of prodigious activity in Taungs. The market square was filling up. Auctioneers were putting up thin, miserable donkeys and broken carts, which brought Incredible prices. Indian peddlers. old clothes men. hawkers of "icecold’’ drinks poured , out from canvas bottles suspended in the sun. to lose heat by evaporation, swarmed among the crowd of bidden*. Occasionally a man on horseback. In flannel shirt and wide-brimmed hat of felt, his worldly goods packed in his saddle-bags, and thumping at his steed’s flanks, came loping by. riding toward the west. Many of the ox wagons were already upon their way, making their first march before the heat of noon. Winton pushed his way through the throngs and found the coach office, near the northeastern comer of the square, surrounded by a crowd of applicants. among them his traveling companions of the two days and nights spent in the train. The coach, a huge affair, containing seats for sixteen, with an immense leather boot at the back for baggage, stood at the side of the office; In the rear a half-dozen mules, which had been led from tlteir‘stables, were tak-. ing their last roll in the dust and scattering clouds upon the bystanders. Winton heard a passenger offer twenty pounds for a ticket to a little oneeyed man. who rejected his proposal The fare was ten pounds; the little man had bought some seats on speculation, and was receiving offers with astonishing disdain and arrogance. “Twenty pounds!” he repeated sar-’ castically. spirting into the dust. "Gemmen here offers twenty pounds for a seat as far as Malopo.- Come, gemmen, shame him! Only one stage a day, and all the seats booked weeks’ ahead. Who says fifty?” “Fifty!” cried a stalwart old prospector at Winton’s s. 1 "Sixty !” shouted anoilier. “Sixty! Who’ll raise sixty? Seventy? Thank yoh. sir. Eighty? Seventyl five?" He was holding out the ticket to Winton, who shook his bead Indignantly. Just then his eyes lit upon a pair I who attracted and arrested his ntten- ! tlon Immediately. One was an old ' man. apparently in his late sixties! with his occupation as prospector stamped all over him. in rhe hungry eyes, suni wrinkled and staring, his calloused hands; the other was a girl,, darki balred. about three-and-twenly, and of singular and rather exotic beauty, who stood beside him, her arm drawn ; through his own. It «‘as not so much the contrast be- ; tween the two that struck Winton as i the reversal of their natural roles, in i that the girl seemed to be the leading I spirit. There was something indica- ; rive of protectiveness in her finely modeled face, her gesture. The man, on the other bind, looked like one broken by misfortune; bls hands shook, as with a palsy, and he glanced up into the fuce of liis taller daughter from time to time with appealing helplessness.
"It’s fortunate that I got a ticket for you. father, wht-n 1 left Malopo,” said the girt. had evidently come into Taungs to meet her father. Winton wondered who she was. and what she was doing alone in Malopo, unless her father lived there habitually. "Eighty I” shouted the ticket-holder. “Elghty-five?” Winton realized that the man was addressing him again. He had declined to pay seventy-five with indignation. But now, before he quite realized what he was doing, be nodded. All the while he was watching the girl and the old man. “I'm bid elghty-flve. Who says ninety? Eighty-seven ten,, then. For the last time, gemmen! Going at eighty-rive, which is a s.u and a s- :tndal—going—going—gone! Its yours, sir!” So Winton found himself the possessor of a ticket to Malopo. for which he bad paid the equivalent of four hundred dollars and a trifle more out of his swiftly diminishing capital of ten thousand. And he found himself wondering why the sight of the old man and the girl had caused him to change his mind and fall into the speculator’s trap. • He discovered that the coach would not start for nearly an hour, and. suspecting that Malopo prices would be considerably in advance of those In Taungs. hurried Into the first store he saw which did not seem to have a native clientele. There be threw himself upon the mercy of the proprietor who equipped him with a sensible outfit cbnslsting of a small tin trunk —the white ants would eat through his leather suit-case tn one night. Winton was told —and a correct up-country costume. Winton sent for his baggage, which the proprietor obligingly agreed to store for him, and presently strolled in sensible khaki, with a wide-brimmed- felt bat rising Into a peak, and high boots. He took his seat among the miscellaneous crowd of passengers. and. while the mob outside cried fantastic offers for seats through the window, the mules, now ten in number, started. On the box sat the Hottentot driver, cracking his twenty-foot whip of hip popotamus hide, and flicking the slackest mules with a dexterity that was nover at fault. On rolled the coach 1 through the Infested streets. into the dean desert, making tn the direction
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
of a ridge of pale-blue mountains westward. • . - - It swayed and creaked upon Its way, the baggage thumping In the boot, the mules dancing over the sand, the passengers good-humoredly jostling one another at every movement It began to pass the travelers of the morning—men riding thirsty Basuto pofiies. carts with thin donkeys, crawling at a snail’s pace between heaven and sand; daring and resolute pedestrians walking beside donkeys, their only friends, laden with baggage and-water-bags. Winton turned his attention to his fellow passengers. Besides the old man qnd the girl there were a number of prospectors and mining men. evidently old residents of the country, to judge from their tanned and the brick-red arms disclosed under the uprolled shirt sleeves. There were two or three clerks or storekeepers, and one man seated in a corner, with his bat over it is eyes, whose insolent demeanor and flashy clothes arrested Winton’s attention. Winton sat rather uncomfortably against the strap that ran across the wi«lth of the coach in the\center, dividing it into two portionsTltthl furnishing an inconvenient,’ swinging support for two rows of passengers, back to back. There was another row at either end of the coach; thus there were four lines of seats, the occupants of the first and second, and those of the third and fourth facing each other. Opposite Winton sat the girl and her fhther. The old man, who had taken several pulls at a flask in his pocket, was lying back half asleep. As Winton watched him, he saw his eyes open, travel from face to face, and suddenly fix themselves upon some occupant of the farthest row with a look of terror and abasement. Involuntarily Winton turned, to perceive, that the man with his bat over his eyes had pushed it up and was watching the older one w>th a smile of amusement. Winton thought his face, was one of the must sinister that he had ever seen. He was about forty years of age, and no’ ill-looking; but the smile on his countenance was a wolfish snarl. There was greed there, and cruelty, and utter heartlessness. Yawning, the man ruse, and,without a word of apology, strode over the strap, pushing between the seated passengers. He went over to the girl. Beside her was an inoffensive little clerk. He Jerked him by the arm. “I’ll change places with you.” he sahl peremptorily. The little cietk rose obediently and made his way across the strap, the other passengers, wh/had not dared to resent the first disturbance, remonstrating vehemently dislodged themselves to allow him passage. "Well, Sheilff; my dear." said the newcomer, grinping into.tbe girl s face, "glad to see you, I’d lreei( wondering how you could stay away from your old i friend De Witt so long.” He was referring evidently to himself. Winton started at the naiqe. He • had- an introduction to De’Within his ’ pocket, but now be hardly feji like ! presenting it. - De Witt sat down beside the girl* There, was nothing in the man’s words that need be especially offensive in a ■ free-and-easy community, but the taI miliarity of the coarse tones, which I made the girl wince, stung Winton to I fury. “Well, who’d have thought to see you here. Daddy Seaton?” the man con- ■ tinned. "Come to try your luck on the ! fields? It’s never too lath to strike it - rich. You and I have been old friends, duddy, since those days down at Sand ! River.” The old man. who had been watching : the other like a fascinated rabbit, put i out one hand with an involuntary ges- ' ture which seemed to be warding off a , blow. “I—didn't know you were here. Mr. De Witt,” he gulped. “Or you would have given Malopo a ‘ wide berth, eh?" laughed the other. “Well, never mind, daddy. Friends like you and me stand together through thick and thin—eh, Sheila?” Winton saw the appealing look in the girl’s eyes. But he restrained himself. ' There was nothing he could do; he had no knowledge as to the relationship, if . any. existing between the girl and De I Witt. And while he was trying to keep < Ids anger under control, the coach j stopped at the first post. The passengers were glad to stretch tbeir legs after the ten-mde drive. The : mules, unharnessed, rolled in the dust <ielighte<iiy, while their ten successors came dancing through the corral. They were inspanned, the driver cracked bis whip, and once more the coach was off and away, and the post only a fleck upon the bosom of the sand. It was Insufferably hot. The whirling dust found its way through the crevices of the window-panes and <-oated the interior of the coach with white, plastering the sweat-stained faces of the
CURE FOR SEASICK FISHERMEN
Origin of the Game of Mah Jongg Three Thousand Years Ago Told in Chinese Legend. Some 3.000 years ago. according to the legend, there was a fisherman named Sze wbb lived on the shores of. the East Chien lake near N'ingpo Sze’s family had considerable wealth, and they backed him in the purchase of several beats. Then h£ employed a hundred fishermen. from other villages. All went well until the wind began to blow’ for all of the fishermen were “land" fishermen. They became seasick and had to be taken ashore. A family council was held, and It was decided that seasickness was merely a matter of the mind. Therefore the thing to do was to devise some method for getting the men’s minds off their mai de mer.. Fisherman Sae and hts brothers then thought long and seriously, and the result was a game which they called Mah Dlau. *
travelers. Daddy Seaton still crouched in his corner, watching De Witt In fascinated terror. De Witt’s mood appeared to have changed when he resumed his seat beside Sheila. With hardly a word to her he settled himself to sleep, as did the majority of the passengers. His body, swaying with the swaying coach, gravitated now toward her and now toward the man next to him, who was himself asleep, his head resting against the glass of the window: finally, however. De Witt’s head fell sideways upon the girt’s shoulder, and the man lay with his shoulders supported against her body. Winton saw the same appealing look in lier eyes. And this time he was about to intervene, when Sheila ventured to protest by a slight movement which sent De Witt’s head back gently against the padded back of the coach. De Witt opened his eyes, looked round, grinned, and settled himself again deliberately In the same position. Next moment Winton was standing in front of pim, white with possion. “Have the goodness to take your 'head off that lady’s shoulder!” he demanded. He was aware of a slight commotion among the other passengers, such as is described in published accounts of speeches by the parenthetical word “sensation.” But the effect t of his
«W r Wfe f'l 1 ’ Horton shot his z 7 right upuwrd with the full force of his bodq behind it
words upon De Witt was electrical. The man sat bolt-upright, stared at him, snorted, and then deliberately shot out his foot, the heavy boot striking Winton in the pit of the stomach and causing him to double ap with pain. It was only for a moment./ Winton leaped at him, tore him from his place, and sent him spinning backward against the window with a well-planted blow in the face. Instantly the coaeh.was in an uproar. Hands were outstretched to pull Winton away. But Winton, mad with rage and pain, was ignorant of them and of Daddy Seaton’s high, quavering cry of alarm. As De Witt recovered himself, he followed his blow with another, which landed squarely on the man’s lip. The blood spurted as from an artery, and De Witt reeled and fell backward its the door gave. In his fall he clutched at Winton and dragged him from the vehicle. A few seconds later Winton found himself facing De Witt upon the sand, she coach had stopj-ed some hundred yards distant, and its occupants were running back toward the pair. In a flash Winton realized two things: first, that bin enemy was not a coward, at least when infuriated; second, that he was a man of great muscular strength. De Witt ran at him. bellowing like a bull, while the blood from, liis cut lip streamed down over his chin. Winton was no mean boxer, but the trained man is not always profited by his lore in a rough-and-tumble. There followed a confusion of short blows wL:<h never got home, then De Witt had him by the throit, but lost his hold. Winton grew calmer. The others were almost upon them, and he meant to punish De Witt before they wer* separated. He watched for his opportunity. and as De Witt, flinching under a short and comparatively harnv Jess jai> at his face, opened a space between his body and his extended arms, Winton shot his right upward with the full force of his body behind it. It was a deadly blow at close range, permitting the extension of the striker’s arm to the folk with no possibility of an ounce of the driving-power being lost. It caught De Witt upon the point of the Jaw, and the man dropped where he stood. A moment later Winton stood, quite collected, in the hands pf the other passengers, who, .seeing that the fight was over, fumed their attention to the man on the ground.
"Nobody can fight tha Judge as Mr. De Witt is his righthand man."
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
So there one has the origin of “Mah Chang," “Mah Cboh." “Mah Jongg.' “Mah Jack." “Pe Ling," “Pung Woo," “Mah Cheuk.” or whatever you deslr» to call this game of the ancles’ Chinese. Only Ono Vote Cast. At Santa Rosa, Cat, there was an election at which only one vote could be and was cast, although the polls remained open for 12 hoars, in accordance with state law, and there was a board of three to count the vote. Santa Rosa planned to annex a tract known as Procto.- Terrace, and only one man, Emil Lattanzl, lived In the tract- He cart the sole vote and helped to count it as a member of the election board, composed of himself and two citizens. living outride of the terrace. Happiness is something a man iuu to find in spite of a lot of things.
*Wiiss edmerica” Declares Taniac Wonderful Health Qiving Tonic Mia* Campbell in “Mi** AmercroWß which she haa won on H two occasion*. — Photo by Atlantic Foto Servioa. I s fl Bhk
Miss Mary Katherine Campbell, twice proclaimed “Miss America,” has taken TANLAC and endorses it in a statement recently given to the women of America. In this statement, Miss America declares that Good Health is the basis of all Beauty, and advises women who would be beautiful to “first find good health.” Her complete statement as given is as follows: “I consider it a great privilege to be able to tell the thousands of women everywhere what a great tonic” TANLAC is.. Health is the basis of all beauty. Without good health, one is apt to be rundown, nervous, underweight, highstrung, anemic. Indigestion drives the roses from a woman’s cheeks and robs her of that radiant quality of womanhood that is real beauty.
INTERNATIONAL PROPRIETARIES, INC. Department ...W. BT. U. ATLANTA. GA. Gentlemen: I herewith enclose 10 eent* (stamp* wUI do), for which send me a copy of Mi** Mary Katherine Campbell'* Booklet on “Beauty and Health." Name. Street. Town State Two pleasant ways to relieve a cough, S&l Take your choice and suit \ your taste. S-B —or Menthol JL flavor. A sure relief for coughs, colds and hoarseness. Put one ' in your mouth at bedtime. tmac* Always keep a box on hand. **An»» SMITH BROTHERS SB COUCH DROPS .Hg.rapt,
A garage turned into a ehicKen house is income. A chicken bouse turned into u garage is outgo. Any picnic Is a success if it doesn’t rain until after the fried chicken ahd sponge cake have been eaten. DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN Take Tablets Without Fear if You See the Safety “Bayer Cross." Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 23 years. Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. Money doesn’t mean happiness unless you haven’t got any. If you aren’t interested in other people, you won’t gossip.
Get rid of V constipation i by internal cleanliness < Maim Diteou Start fnta ’ | *HERE is no reason why you should suffer from 1 constipation. Headaches, biliousness, sleepless nights, heaviness, are nature s warning that intestinal poisons are flooding your system. If allowed to continue, you may become a victim of serious organic disease. In constipation, say intestinal specialists, lies the primary cause of more than three-quarters of all illness including the gravest diseases of life. Laxatives Aggravate Constipation Laxatives and cathartics do not overcome cor sdpation, says a noted authority, but by their' con inued use tend only to aggravate the condition and often . lead to permanent injury. Why Physicians Favor Lubrication Medical science, through knowledge of the inte vtinal tract gained by X-ray observation, has sou id at last in htbricalion a means of overcoming constip ition. The gentle lubricant. Nujol, penetrates and s (tens t the hard food waste and thus hastens its passafe ? out of the body. Thus Nujol brings internal cleanl ness. Nujol is used in leading hospital* and is prescribed by phy icians throughout the world. Nujol is not a medicine or laxati e and cannot gripe. Like pure water it is haxmleaa. Get rid of constipation and avoid disease by adopting th- habit of internal cleanliness Take Nujol a* regularly as you brush your teeth or wash your face. For sale by all drugpats. IK Nui ol For Inumol Cleanliness
“I have taken TANLAC and I do not hesitate to say that jt is a wonderful health-giving tonic. It has ! brought relief and good health to ’ many women, and with good health ' one may have a measure of beauty that will overcome shortcomings in ; face and figure. , “Rosy cheeks, sparkling eyes, a ; well-rounded figure, a lovable dis- . position, go hand in hand with good i health. To those searching for beauty, I would say—‘First of all, Find ; Good Health.’ The TANLAC treat- ■ ment has proven itself a boon to ■ womankind, and I recommend it.” i Miss Campbell has written a book- ! let on Health and Beauty which may be secured by filling out the coupon below.
Any fool can be disagreeable, but it takes rare self-control to be a gentleman in all circumstances. The occasional two of Roman Eye Balaam at nl<ht will prevent and relieve tired eyes and eye strain. STI Pearl St., N. Y. Adv. Hard knocks are good for a man, it they are not too hard. There’s no fool like a young fool wha tries to act like an old foo’. Money may not bring happiness, but it saves one a lot of worry. Hall’s Catarrh Medicine rid your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. I Soid by drvfgists fiw over 40 yaarw F. J. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo. Ohio
