The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 April 1925 — Page 6

Help That Achy Back! Are you dragging around, day after day, with a dull, unceasing backache? Are you lame in the morning; bothered with headaches, dinineee and urinary disorder*? Fee! tired, irritable and discouraged? Then tbare’a rarely something wrong, and likely it’s kidney weakness. Don't neglect it! Get back your health while you can. Uee Doan** Pills. Doan's have helped thousands of* ailing folks. They should, help you. Ask your netphbor/ An Ohio Cage J* Mrs. A. F. Troy’‘•’•’’flll er - Main St.. West -Jf XXbe pick up anything, sharp, knife - like /.-jsWf v-sAJjk peins darted across tJsfatfl I my back. Black [rcz-'A tij.-TBff specks danced bef<>r* me. blurring jmy slaht and mak* 1! nk- me dizzy. My d. kidneys acted ir- ' regularly. One box ~ of Doan's Pills made my back strong and my kidneys were regulated. DOAN’S STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS FoeterAtabcra Cou.Mb.Oi—. frith in, N.Y. cpjHllJgjj tWEWwflr DISTEMPER. MEgafittaMF compopmd A Ditf erence Benson—Women are Just like babies —they want everything they see. Dennis—Yes; the only difference being that they usually get what they want. Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the tare with Cuticura Ointment Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful what Cuticura win de for poor complexions, dandruff, Itching and red, rough hands.—Advertisement. — > Men’s Faces All men's faces are true, whatsoever their hands are.—Shakespeare. You Are IgF Safe when you take Father John’s Medicine for COLDS and to build new flesH and strength, berause it is free from morphine, chloroform, codeine, heroin, or other dangerous drugs and alcohol. Take it Today. S.S.S. stops Rheumatism •MY Rheumatism to aS gone. 1 fed i A a wonderful glory again in the free motion I used to have when tny days were younger. I can thank S. S. S. f 71 A for it Ml! Do Mt I M i close your eyes U / «»d think that V>y ■ / health, tree motion \ K B / “d strength are gone from you forever! It to not aa S. S-s. to waittag I® help you. When you mcreaee the number of your red-blood-cdls. the entire system undergoes a ( 1 11 " — tremendous change, » reMat depend. on blood-strength, co., matt Blood which to minus Attoatw sufficient red-cells leads to a long list of matter A Blood, troubles. Rhenmatiam to one of them." & & & to ths great blood-cleanser, blood-builder, syeta ■ ttrengtbener, and nerve invigorator. kS. S. S. b, soM «t ah «od darn. stere*Jn 1 worses. .The SS Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother*! Remedy /><K a For every stomach and tatesttaal fH. ■b Ji This good old-fash-togg toned herb home remedy for const!patton. stomach ills and other derangemqots of the system so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in >our grandmother's day. South Florida Land For Sale VI. tot acta* OSi p*r Mr*: «t.to* acraa, It* par acre; Ji. tot acre* *l* ya* <cr*; «M atrre H 5 par *cm: k»W *en» It* »er «*«• » M »• acra tract* tor km e«rp«— Maw "•■"sasa#rs&““ RESINOL Soothinq end He&linq for Rashes and Chafinq Caat

I TALES FROM BIG CITIES

Lure of the Stock Market Wrecks Life

OSTON.—The lure of stock-mar-ket gambling was blamed by the I authorities for the plight of Mrs. Aimee A. Sweeney, confidential

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secretary and adviser to Boston mining operators, who was charged with larceny of $22,000 in bonds from Mrs. Gordon A. Prince, society woman. Mrs. Sweeney Is the second woman financier to fall Into the bands of police of New England In two weeks. Mias Maude Tefft, treasurer of the Kingston (R. I.) Trust company, is under arrest, charged with wrecking the bank and stealing 1110.000. Mra Sweeney, a flfty-two-year-old woman who has handled millions of dollars in conducting business deals of her employers, and who, ft is alleged, was tempted* finally by stockmarket gambling, bad* a dual personality, her arrest revealed. She posed as a spinster, although married for 15 years to James E. Sweeney Os Worcester, district passenger agent of the Boston & Albany railway. Sweeney hurried to Boston to aid his wife. Tbe couple did not live together, but their relations were cordial. The wife

Turns Over Legacy for Home for Aged

AYONNE, N. J.—Mrs. Rose Gluckman of 783 Avenue C, does ! not want to wait for death to give aged people of Bayonne the

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home and fortune her husband left in trust for She turned over the 20rootn brick house and two-thirds of the Income from 8300,000 to the United Hebrew Congregations of Bayonne for immediate use and is planning to move to a small bouse in a less fashionable street. Her husband, Isaac Gluckman, a hardware merchant, who died In April, 1915. provided in his will that his widow should live in the house and receive the income from his estate during her lifetime and that after her death the house and money be used in ‘ establishing a home for aged Jews of the city. For ten years now Mrs. Gluckman has lived alone in the house, which !« In the beet section of Bayonne, next door to the home of the late James S. Coward, the shoe manufacturer. She deeded It and signed over the estate to the United Hebrew Congregations with the consent of the executors, Horace Roberson and Charles Annett, and tbe permission of the Court of

Vanity of Escaped Thief Was Costly

lEW YORK.—Vanity, the plague of so many accomplished thieves, betrayed Frank Telfer into the arms of the police and

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started him back to prison. Telfer couldn’t resist the temptation to taunt the men who had sent him away. Therefore, after he had escaped from Trenton under cover of a heavy fog, be called Jersey City police headquarters and left a message for Chief Battersby, his old enemy. "Tell Battersby that I’m out in less than a year, as I raid I would be." he jeered on the .phone. “And tell him I’m going to pqll a few stick ups in Jersey City right away. . “Walt a minute till I connect you with the chief himself." said the police operator. • “Take another look at me. brother." said Telfer. wise in his craft. “Don’t pull that ‘wait a minute’ gag on a smart guy and then go tracing this call. Juat give the chief my regards." Telfer rang off and vanished, but the police traced the call nevertheless and detectives went out to look for him. The next afternoon, two New Jersey detectives and two men of the New

New Jersey May Sterilize Her Unfit.

rRENToN. N. J.—The Williams bill providing for the eugenic sterilization of habitual criminals and feeble-minded persons was

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passed by the New Jersey senate by a vote of 11 to 8. Other measures simF tar In mow respects have been defeated. It is considered likely, however, i that the provisions regarding habitual ? criminals may be removed before It , reaches the governor. The bill was introduced by Senator Henry A. Williams of Passaic county, the youngest member of tbe senate. He led the defense of his measure when criticism was directed at it. He en>phasized the facj that New Jersey is i paying gIO.tXXVO) annually for the | maintenance of 1» mentally defective . citizens pointing out that thia com would be reduced were teproduettou if the mentally unfit made impossible. The principal attack on the bill was made by Senator Alexander Slmpeon of Hudson county, whose contention was that the provisions were not sufficiently specific and that It was not always possible to determine the incur-

Antelope Placed in Grand Canyon Park

V’CSON, ARlZ.—Twelve joW. antelope have been introduced Into the Grand Canyon National park by tbe Department of the

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Interior with the co-operation of the bureau of biological survey. The Americin Game Protective association la a recent bulletin states that this experiment Is particularly interesting because It has some new features. Forty antelope fawns were When immediately after birth from herds tn Nevada and were placed in an inclosure on the state game preserve until they were old enough to be shipped. Six ofthe fawns injured or kilted themselves in captivity, but thirty-four survived in fine condition. At the age of three months, the diet of the young antelope was gradually changed to grain and com. After they had been entirely weaned from milk they were split up into groups, some being sent to the game preserves In Nebraska Tend Montana, while the twelve were shipped to the Grand Canyon National park. Plant-

preferred a place In the business world to home life. It was explained. Mrs. Sweeney was known to her employers as “Miss Jones.” Mrs. Sweeney figured prominently In the recent court action over the ST.000.000 Slater fortune. She was secretary to Mrs. Horace N. Slater, Sr. Mrs Sweeney had long been a trusted employee of Rodoiphe Agassis m the various Agassiz enterprises, including tbs Calumet A Hecla company. As secretary of the New England Exploration company, a subsidiary of tbe Calumet company, Mrs. Sweeney bad access to the safety deposit vault of Mrs. Prince, in a local trust company. The alleged theft of bonds from tbe vault covers a period of two years. Mrs. Sweeney had power of attorney from Bulkeley Wei I a millionaire mining man of Colorado. Wells is an official of the Exploration company and spends much time in the West. By using this power of attorney Mrs Sweeney is alleged to have got the bonds from the vault. Mrs. Prince formerly was Miss Anna Agassiz and was married last summer to Lieut. Gordon Prince, famous World war flyer.

Chancery. “I was not satisfied to be merely content,” she said. “I wanted to be really happy. I have learned that happiness Is as big as the world Itself and there is no limit to how much a person may have. 1 know what money would buy for me. I had much money, but not enough to buy that material happiness to satisfy me. I struck a better bargain in tbe purchase of spiritual happiness. “Every penny of this estate came from the hardest kind of toll, and to create It my husband was literally spent. I do not regret the toil and trouble we had to create it, for It has taught me something I could not otherwise have learned, and it has taught me really how to live. “My husband did not build the house just for ourselves. He provided In It facilities for offering prayer to God In accordance with the Jewish custom. He meant some day that the house should be dedicated to the material happiness of others. I decided to obey the spirit of his last wishes, and that Js why I am turning it and tbe money over to the Jewish community of Bayonne.” ■

York force who had arrested Telfei before were walking along St. Nicholas avenue far uptown from the cabaret zone which Telfer used to haunt “My God," exclaimed Joe Dafey, one of the New York detectives, “here* he comes straight at us,” and threw himself upon Telfer. There was a sharp fight but Telfer was 'crusned to the pavement. He left New York for Trenton in irons, to serve a certain period in solitary confinement. He will never be made a trusty now and he will have to serve his full term of 00 years. “They’re all conceited," said Detective Joe Daley. “They all like to conic back and strut about the streets, think ing the cops are too stupid to nail them. If Telfer had kept his mouth shut, he might have got away." Telfer, who is less than thirty today, was a notorious spender along Broadway when he was running his career robbing stores and wayfarers in lonely Jersey localities. He would leave a cabaret at two o’clock In tbe morn ing as a rule and do a “job” in some isolated section before going to bed. to get money for the next night’s round of pleasure.

ability of recurrent insanity. 1 “Any person,” the bill direeta. “wha after a judicial Inquiry as provided Id this act. shall have been determined to be afflicted with recurrent or chronic insanity or feebte-mindedness which can be transferred to his offspring, or to be a habitual criminal of defective meßiality, which defective mentality can be transmitted to his offspring, may be eugenicaily sterilized.’’ Despite the use of the masculine pronoun, the bilL as law, would be binding on both sexes. The commissioner of institutions and agencies is empowered by the measure to determine upon what Individuals it shall be operative. He shall petition the Court of Common fleas in the county to which such individual Ilves to direct the sterilization, and tbe court, upon 20 days’ notice, shall hold a public hearing. Tbe defendant in this acti<m is accorded the right to demand a Jury trial by notice which must be served ten days after the issuance of tbe court order for a beartog-

ing them in the selected place tn th* park presented some difficulty because It necessitated not only a train rid* but also a journey of eight miles ii crates on pack mules. All twelve, bow ever, arrived In splendid condition ant since the terrain is admirably suttee to them, it is hoped that they will Ir time form the nucleus of a consider able herd. “This illustrates again," says th* bulletin, "the advances made tn th* last few years in stocking country where the wild life has for one reasot or another disappeared. A few yean ago it would have been deetped abso lately Impossible to ; capture young an tel ope as soon as they were born, tc bring them up and to transfer then many mites to another section. Now it is not only possible hut it is perfect ly practical. The setence of game man agement has progressed so far that today there to no reason why any dis trict containing suitable food and ter rain should not have some sort of a game supply."

THE SYRACUSE roVKXAI.

Scrapszi 0/ Jra DIPLOMACY WINS “Go away at once,” she said. “We don't want any pots and pans.” “But 1 want to see the lady of tbe house,” insisted the peddler. “Well, use your eyes then," retorted the lady. “But surely you are not the lady of the house.” Insisted the man. “I should have sworn that you were the youngest daughter.” “Fll have that cabbage strainer," •be said. NO GREATER LOVE Miss Mouse—Are yon sure you love me? Mr. Mouse—More than I do mjr cheese, dearest I Ostentation The honest hen unheeded goes. For praise she'll feebly beg. ' " s The way the rooster struts and crows— You’d think he laid tbe egg! Had Trouble “Didn’t you say this car would do seventy-five miles an hour without any i trouble?” asked the recent purchaser i of the agent. “Yes,” was the reply. “Didn’t she?” “She did seventy-five all right, but the trouble I got into cost me S2O and easts." Puzzled Her Four year-old Dorothy had Just heard her mother giving a grocery der over the telephone “Mamma,” she said, “did you order some corn starch?” “Yes. dear.” “What for?” asked Dorothy. “Is you «°to’«’U<u.d Wr . a r ro n..r , Ftd Up Wife—Would you like some nice waffles this morning, dear? Hub—No, thank yon. Helen. They look too huch like fried cross-word puzzles, and Fm fed up on those. BORN REAL ESTATE MAN. “You say he’s a born real estats * man?” “Undoubtedly; he’s made no end of people believe they’d enjoy a mile walk from a house to a car line. 1 1., ■ One IVay to Hold Him When Joy 1* on hl« joumoy W« ask him tn to stay. And give him such a high old Umo He nover goes *•***’. Chance of a Lifetime The 80-pound husband was the defendant and the 200-pound wife was the plaintiff. t “And why did you slap your wife’s face instead of helping her when tbe automobile knocked her down?’ in- } quired the judge. . i “Well, your honor," replied the diminutive husband. “opportunity knocks but once." —American Legion Wes My. Found the Hole "I meant to have tonld you of that hole.” sai(i an Irishman to bis friend, who was walking with him in his garden, and tumbled into a pit full of water. “No matter," said his friend, blowing the mud and water out of Ids mouth. Tve found if Meeurung Not ffuroosimr Mr. Glummer—ls I should die before you I hope you won’t wear mournin’. His Wife— 1 won't I tried on some last winter when you were so ill and it made me look ten years older. A ißare Father—So you are finding oat that married life has Its troubles? Danghtee—Yea Sometimes Henry , simply won’t listen to reason. Fattier-He ought to be ashamed of himself. Not every married man has t hscoee. Under No Obligatione Rtf* UFKaan-mMsaa* Y n rTfi>niTpushed, I owe It to myael f. Mr. Wire—How delightful It must ba to feel so clear at debt! Worth it YWbtar—Too moat be glad to have your daughter home again. WT IT*<_ aJkae** IwMhn Til sth Ino T oom ■ she's cost a tot of money, but It start been wasted, •'We're very proud of er —she won’t ’arffly speak to mother an* me, now." Gorraiouv AeT* ' Hw tMSBt M CTFBiir from” \ ’ > ■ \ '~ ’ • :

RECOVER QUICK FROM GRIPPE OR FLU! After a spell of Grippe or flu, when your system is all run down and your legs are so weak they can hardly hold up your body, the best thing yon can do to get hack your health and. strength quick, is to start right in taking Tanlac. It’s wonderful how soon you really do start to improve! Tanlac sails right in and puts the system In fighting trim. It cleans the blood, revitalizes the digestive organs, gives you an appetite for solid food and makes you feel like a new person. Nothing will turn the trick quite as fast as Tanlac, made after the famous Tanlac formula from roots, barks and herbs gathered from the fonr corners of the earth. Buy a bottle today and get started back to full strength and vigor. Take Tatdac JRtfb TOT \eCMl9llpmiOn TANLAC FOR YOUR HEALTH Why He Escaped The girl was Interested in the yarns the fat old sailor was telling.. He had "just finished relating bls experiences with cannibals, and she said: “And so the natives didn't harm you, after all?” “Bless you, no.” was the reply. ’They diun’t have a saucepan my size." For true blue, use Red Cross Ball Blue. Snowy-white clothes will be sure to result. Try it and you will always use if* All good grocers have it —Advertisement. No Backbone Worm—Why do you call me’a coward? Bug—You have no backbone! Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills correct Indigestion, constipation, liver complaint, biliousness. Costs yon nothing to send tor trial box to BTt Pearl St., N. Y. Adv. Well-arranged time is the surest mark of a well-arranged mind. Are You Nervous? Portsmouth, Ohio—“About twenty years ago I was clear down and out physically, m y tn erv e s were completely gone and I could not sleep or eat. I was able to sit up only about an hour at a time. I doctored for six months but instead of getting better I grew worse.-A neighbor persuaded me to take Dr Pierce's medicines. I took his ‘Favorite Prescription,’ 'Golden Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pleasant Pellets’, and in three months I was back to normal health, my nerves were good. I could eat and sleep well and do all my own work.”—Mrs. Edward Pollitt, 844 Front Street All dealers. ** Tar (fat hOIO DQto / agood disporifioh L b cucd an a perfect tiyertion) IS the ftrft essential” ••‘Oneor hvo.Ja<?ues QapSulejgSifWaflnur ofuzator..... therej the/ perfect diqextion./ > Poekrt State ZBe. Hoaae Stee Me Northern Florida and j Southern Georgia Land values tn some parts ot Florida ’ save advanced faster in recent yean than in any other part of the eastern t United States Every year a million ot more Florida tourists pass lands In ■ torthern Florida and In southern Georgia where prices are still low and ! general farming conditions offer at- • Iractive opportunities for investment • tnd profitable farm operations. Write o W. E. Price, General Immigration Agent. Southern Railway, Room ««• -Vashington. D. C.. for full particulars. PARKER’S ROmI HAIR BALSAM I Smam OwwJreff-Suxu Hast Faffing HINDERCORNS Bemovea Ooms. Cal- i hMKMMh tf&GM *ll pad*. mVQHMI CKHUfCNFt t* tIM ’ feet, makes valUag eaay- lie by mail or at Drug data. WaeoaOMMßiaßi Wofks.Patdnguo.ff. Y. blrauS xma i... nuj meiiW— Ataraa*b<*«-a«mt«WfMil unfitw" rodfchaahw•■*•*. Ageeummwc Saa.at. —■vee.awz***> ewes— Wiiriifr—. it-Vr -tT-h-' CUlAia'f gtgaiaraf, Ja—aia fa «e> Mai I ‘mtotaOWY SYRUP I ttfd CShßdrtf* gww ho*ii&3r «ad fytHb 8| *im* MhtfP trouble & mBRO I giv*B it st teeth time, *«Eid ' AtAff Aft MAIM f I“^7 191 Tr » »n t H* W » Zuw SmAwe3nKHMwiwdhff*MidHß ; v ■ ■ ■ -e w ■■ ■ ■

*4 ws Lick Home Town First, Good Advice to Boys In a discussion entitled “How Can I Help My Boy Get Started," Bruce Barton gives sane counsel to tbe youth who thinks he can do better in New York city than in his own town. In bls article in Good Housekeeping, the writer tells for the benefit of young men his experience with a lad he met in another city who felt himself called to the metropolis. “It must be great to live In New York and meet so many Interesting 1 people,” the boy said to him “Do you think I ought to go to New York?". “No,” I answered. * His face fell. “Why not?” “Because New York is full of chaps like you who have never done anything, and for the most part they lead very lonesome lives. You don’t suppose these So-called Interesting’ people would have any interest in you. do you? Interesting people like Interesting people. Success has no time for failures.” It was a shot between the eyes. He was silent for a full minute. His jaw set; it looked more than ever like his father’s jaw. “But I bate this town," he cried. * “What’s the use of staying In a place you hate? Why can’t I start in New York?” “Because it’s a mistake to leave any town until you have licked It,” I answered. “A man’s life ougbt to be like the inarch of an army; he should conquer the territory as be travels, leaving .no hostile forces in his rear. “New York is the biggest thing In the country,” 1 went on. “It’s the champion, the Jack Dempsey, the Babe Ruth of all the towns. You ean’t step out and fight Dempsey right off. You’ve got to get a reputation; you’ve sfot to lick a lot of little fellows first, rhe place for you to start is here, in a town you don’t like.” National Demand for Better Building Seen There are a number of interesting statements in the semiannual statement of the American Construction council, issued through its president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, recently. The statement was formulated at the meeting of the council held In New York city. Especially significant are the passages from the statement which follow: “The increasing demand for better Ouilding, a movement which tbe council sponsored.on a national scale last spring, is. accompanied by a general undertone of increasing confidence as to the greater stability in tbe construction Industry throughout the country as a whole. “The amount of new work contracted for and begun has held up unusually well. This shows a very favorable response on the part of the public to the general movement. “Even a more significant fact stands vut as to the present type of building aperations. There is a larger ratio of commercial and Industrial structures contracted for than there has been for some time.” Gromul Beautifying Hardy plantings give permanent effects, and will grow more beautiful each season. Some bedding plants and innuals may be used also with effect, out where we are planting our own grounds for our home for an indefinite period we can get far better results if we us® mostly hardy trees, shrubs and plants for our general planting. We need not plant ail at >nce. but we can plan for the whole «nd work to our plan as we may. It takes years to obtain the full effect of some kinds of plants and these ihould be planted first, but we can use temporary plantings to help out m the meantime. There are a good many fine plants that can be made very effective on short notice, and even a good showing may be made *1 th annuals from seeds in one summer. These quick effects are especially valuable for those occupying their homes t>ut temporarily.--Suecessful Farming. Planting of Pecans Urged k suggestion for the beautification of country roads and advertisement of this section by planting pecan trees along the highways was received at the office of the board of revenue from W. C. Strong of Theodore. The letter explains that tbe trees would serve for ornamentation and shade and would oe revenue producing in a few years. It was pointed out that the plan is being adopted in other sections of the country. The suggestion was read to the ward and filed.—Mobile Register. Town IXimp Transformed A town dump at Lewisburg, Pa- has become a scenic asset, through the activities of women, who formed a civic club, launched dvic Improvement propaganda, and accumulated funds for a program. * Pamt Insurance Also Insurance is commonly regarded as a necessary precaution against loss by fire. Paint or yarnish Is the only insurance policy ’we can take out too prevent rot and rust. Fertilizer for Plants A very weak solution of Balt makes an excellent fertilizer for house plants, especially winter bulbs. \ Famous Slide The most famous bob-sleigh slide in the world is the Cresta run at St. Moritz, Switzerland. Jaetfs Potential Wealth Buffalo hides and sheep skins are important items in Java’s leather inSnatrr . A * J . -s’-

TdbWHeCan •- Now Eat Hearty M*. J.A ' *X letter which' I read in the p aper about Carter's Little Liver Pills my own case so closely that I could ■ Dot help trying them and am very happy I did.” So writes Mr. Frank J. Trumbull of Jersey City, N. J., whose letter goes on to say, “I had heard about Carter’s Little Liver JPills for years but never knew they~fielped overcome poor appetite and sour stomach, until I read about another man in die same plight , who took Carter’s with good results. I tried them and can honestly say that they freed me of nasty gas on stomach, so that I can now eat without getting bilious, and they improved my appetite fully 100%. You can rest assured that from now on I will boost Carter’s Little Liver Pills whenever I can.” Recommended and for sale by all drust stores. I Tomorrowi I Alright I I ouanee* and kaep the digestive aad I | eliminative functions normal. 112toBu for f f it // Chips off tteOW Block IS JIHHOIO- \\ I ■lfl Litttolßs 11 1 Ona-third the r«gu- I B ’ 1 lar dose. Mad* of Iff It toktfFaame ingradienta. ffff II than candy coated. S S ■ L tor children and adult*. M I BY YOUH A safe and soothing for cuts, H burns, or skin troubles. Protects, re- | lievesandheals.Take H internally for coughs and sore throats. t I Vasehne PETROLEUM JELLY I Chesebrough Mfg. Co.,Cons’d. ■M Seats Sr. New York Beauty may be only skin deep, but It invariably gets a seat in a crowded car. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Bell-ans Hot water 1 Sure Relief DELL-ANS 25<AND 751 F * CXAG£S EVBKWHERE First Quiets—Then Ends A Cough That terrible “hack”, "hack”, ■. “hack", that almost drives you frantic end strains your whole body can be quieted in a jiffy by taking a swallow now and then of that fine old medicine, Kemp's Balsam. It cuts the phlegm, soothes the inflamed membrane and takes away that constant desire to cough, cough, cough. Only >0 seats at all stores. haw done ’Wonder.’ far me. jam wars of s«e. b«n married thirteen yeau and am the mother from headacheajmd conMbwtion for nuaiy fifteen yean. Onedayl was a‘life mver 1 to me. Since then I tow had no more headed*, and my health to ■ood. 1 recommend diem co whomever I M^KLaVirve,JemeyClry. N.J. FoeFREB SAMPUI-wrire tock hJdsdta eri odmow MU Beecham's Pills towammmMemaseime|Mt, TheNewFreely-Lethtrui? ForTender Faces EMOLUEMT KEOICIMAL ANTISEPTIC,Infloeaz*. Cokte. Kidney, Stood and Bladder trouble- helped and peimaneMly cared toy a medicinal herb which grow, in AriiMt A wonder rtiseoveryj , 3 »LiV. Uraete Medicinal Herbs, Oracle. Aria. , ■ ■ , I/-'