The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 51, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 April 1927 — Page 3

Tanlac Effects Humane Rescue Geis Relief From Nemutnm, Bad Stomach, Rheumatism and Rune

Ch 4Tb

Down Condition. "For several years I was in terrible •iiape" frays Mra. Fannie Heim, 2<X) Cakley Street, E vapsville, Ind. i ‘•All food that I aie soured on my stomach. Rheumatism made it agony tor me to move, iwais i eo nervous I could I D)t sleep at night. 1

" Friends of mine recommended Tamil £. Good old Tanlac! It drove the poisoo»from my system, freed me from rheumatism, gave me an appetite for ft od, relieved my stomach trouble and soothed my nerves.” Tanlac usually builds up scrawny, w eak bodies, drives out causes of sufferii g and gives the body good health. 11 is n it ure's remedy made from roots J >arks a id herbe.according to the famousTanbc formula. Learn from others. Take wonderful Tanlac. At your druggist’s Over 40 million bottles sold. I Quick ReUef ! A pleaZant effective «yrup. I . 35c and 60c (bee And externally. uh PISO*S Throat and Cheat Salve. 35c Wild Animals Fear Snakes \ numerous snakes in Great Britain an* so rare tbut cattie show no tear of them, but any foreign beer will he in it state of panic if a snake is ph ced near it. The elephant ignores the largest snakes for he knows that hi- thick hide is a safe armor agionst tlieir nttaeks. Ou the other hand, latge mnnitnals such as the lion and tiger will quickly run off from the presence of a snake DEMAND “BAYER” ASPFRIN Asiirin Marked With “Bayer Cross’* Mas Been Proved Safe by Millions. Warning! Unless you see the name j “I Uy er” on package or on tablets you art not getting the genuine Bayer • As drill proved safe by millions and l»rvscril>ed by physicians sos 26 years. I Ikiy Bqycr" when you buy Aspirin. I Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. I Ik/iere It Was Most Needed I And is he really going to marry all tbi t tM«>ney?” ■Absolutely.” ■|lu« the engagement- been formally ;■!( !>.<ii!;ced v ' Just informally—among his Creditors." Sure Relief Tbs great va’u* of Bell-Aria in the reiirf tei«e«tivc Ji»crd»j»olthe»tom«ch iar.d bowrc (• frv.-ed by its substantial Increase m use every year for the past thirty years Prcmptly and property ta»en we have never known it to foil, c. ■ . r.EStu be.: &£o . Ora;-.£ebu:g, N.Y. Pertoetly BarwUosa ta TeoyerOM Bell-ans FOR INDIGESTION 254 and 7St PkfrsSold Everywhere FOR OVER ZOO YEARS Haarlem oil has been, a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. W HAARLEM OIL Qssasssi < ■rerrect internal troubles, stimulate vital < irgans. Three sires. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. MMMMMMMMtMMMtMMMMMMMtMMKKMMMtMMMMMMMK Keep Stomach and Boweb Right By giving baby th* harmlea*. parol y vasjntable, infants and children’s regulator. MRS. WNSIDW3 SYRUP brings Mtoaiihrs. gratifying results tn tmking baby's stomach digest food snd bowels move as ■Sn they sbouM at teething f £$ 4 time. Cuarantacd free V.'. ■MfSI f-ora narcotic*. optMaW area, aleobe land ail 6*7; W-J &>■ harmful Ingrids- #■ rote. Safe and aauafactory. w. - ' I OZlAf Aft Ui Y Ji M| PARKERS If .> '-4 HAIR BALSAM I K'movr. Uaairuff Map Her EIKVSb R eat ore. Color and ■ESKk lEw Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair Baa® I 1 TH ®cm4 *;<»•» DrogsiM*. t ffIXM <Va «b Fatihxue.N Y. IHINDERCORNS Retncvea Coras. Oal- ■ MM, etc. baton* aM pain, ensarva comfort to the fort, maars *a ting easy Uc by ma.i or at Hrugr- lie, H -.-ux CheSßical Works. f*stoiK<ne. N. T. TIRES & TUBES POSTPAID TO YOUR DOOR Wy unneraelt t»i» man crier h -u*.-* guy higher price* any longer. Order today « aead for our price Um on all siaea. Sumrlt Corvi, guaranteed Cb I ** Mlle* But deti.er IS to 2«1 miles nervlee rtuperlor to any O her malt order howl product, and Chills nge any make to give more mile*. H OS Big Full Standard Clincher Cerd l« . Hl St Bx Double Overuse Cl!n< h C’d. ST »tI'Hl’k Bis I'. üble Oversale Stralghtetdel* »S. 3 H os. 88 ...... Sil. , & 88 SUSS J st OS M Sl2 U 3 -aat* c<B. SS ..515.Y1 HUI Balloon ford 1 S S.S»' S< «L»S Bailo-a Sli.»l B-iIS BaUoun Cord .-. ...SIX»3 »• xi TT Balloon SILSS X «i 3* Heavy Duty First Quat Tub.** $ 1 IS Con with order Postpaid to year door. Lamb’s Wholesale, Payne,Ohio IAI tN I WMWb W. Wmkl JSC •LU predace!' for op » R•_ m thoMaixUot woawa jdjiS ß sswK-tttwsas LADiKS—STS weekly Kaay; addrnMlng *•- v tiopwat h sir all material fgroWbe-Vpartlr- « are frea Howatt Oa. >»♦ W Lak*. Chicago. Yf. N U.. FORT WAYNE. NO. A-1»7

FIX BAYONETS! Sw— kj m Officer of »*< M-r-w CapL JOHN W. THOMASON, Jr. STORY FROM THE START The author describes how tha First battalion of the Fifth marines are quartered near Maritrny during the first part of June. ISIB, when they are suddenly sent up north to relieve the First division, bearing the brunt of the German offensive. Part of the Fifth wrest Hill 143 from the enemy and wait there for the n counter offensive they can see forming A terrific German attack soon develops, wreakIng fearful havoc amonft the marines. tut not dislodgtna them In the imtiedlate vicinity other fierce encounters are reducing the American troops and forcing the necessity of replacements

CHAPTER 11—Continued It came out of the woods Into a pule stone town- —t’hanipillon. There were no lights In the houses; the place had an air of death about ft. There was a Ph.P. from Harvard In that sweating flle. a big. pale, unhandy private, hounded habitually by sergeants and troubled with indigestion and patriotism. For all his training. a pack was not at home on his shoulders or a rifle easy in his hands. He thought of the pleasant jstudy back Cambridge way. of the gold-and-blue sergeant under the “First to Fight!” recruiting poster—“YouF Job. too. fella ! Come on an’ help lick the Hun! You don’t, wanta wait to be drafted, a big guy like you! We can Use you in the marines -? A hearty, red necked ruffian extremely competent in his vocation, no doubt. Good enough chaps. Yes . . . but . . ~ tea by .a seal coal fire in the New England twilight, snd clever talk of art and philosophic anarchism — one wrote fastidious, essays on such things for the more discriminating reviews . . . scholarly abstrac- ' lions. ... < ' of all the stupid. Ignorant, uncivilized thing- a war’ that phase, ch'.llzed warfare? There was u«> such t : ing’ . . . Here. In the most cidllzt-d v>untry »n earth. ... The neighborhood of Cliateau-Thierry . . . Montaigne's town, wasn’t it? The king- of France had a chateau near it. <>n<e. And yet It was always a co, kpi’ . . since Aetins rolled back Attila in the battle of the nations, at Chalons —Najtoleon fought ChampAubert and Montmirail around hbre — always war— The column was. through Champlllon. dipping into a black hollow. More shellholes in the road here. . . . All at once there was a new shell Imle. m-I tl e d<> :or of pidlo-ophy. sotnetitm private of marines, lay be•d i ?. v,-rv h-- ’lv belie ded with the rifle, that had been su«h a bore to keep clean, across his knees, and dried prunes spilling out of the pockets that he never had learned to button. The column went on. At .dawn a naval medico attached to the marine brigade, with a Ntaff .officer, passed that way. Odd. the wounds you see.*’ observvd the naval man. professionally Interested. He l<«>ke«l intriousiy. “J •ouldn’t have done a neater decaplta•fon than that myself. Wonder who—took his identification tags with it. I see. Replacement, by his uniform—” (For the Fifth and Sixth regiments had long since worn out their forest-er-green marine uniforms, and were wearing army khaki, while the replacements came in new green clothing. > The staff officer picked up the rifle, snapped back the bolt, and Mtutnteil expertly down the bore. “I’isgu-tin’." h< said "Sure he was a replacement. You never catch an oM-titner with a bore like flhat- — filthy! Bet there hasn’t been a rag through it in a week You know, surev.iti, I was king u some of the rifles of that bunch of machine-gun-■ivrs lying in the •brush just across from Battalion: they were beautiful. Never saw better kept pieces. Fine soldiers in a lot of ways, these Boche!” Meantime the column had passed ■ > ■’ ■* wber • the rifles ahead sounded very n«ar. They saw dugouts by the thread of candlelight around the edges of the blankets that cloaked their entrances. One was a aressingstatiou. by the sound and the smell of It. The officer named Henry ducked into the other. There a sttockr major sat up on the floor and rolled a cigarette. which he lighted at a guttering candle. “Repla< , ements io? Weil, what do they look like?— ** “Same men I saw in the training -areas last month, air. a sprinkling of old-time marines—Sergeant McGee, that we broke for something or other in Panama, is-with ’em—and the rest of them are young college lads and boys off the farm—fine material, sir. Not much drill, but they probably know how to shoot, they take orders, and they don't s<-are worth a cent! Shelled coming in. at Vole du Chatelle. and some more this side of t'hampHlon —several casualties. No confusion —nothing like a panic— Laid down and waited for order-s---lid exactly as they were told—fine neo. sir!” CHAPTER 111 .. The Bob de Belleau; Coming , Out. They tried new tactics to get the layenets trio the Beds de Belleau., PI-- -v lean platoons now—-

formed in small combat groups, deployed in the wheat, and set out toward the gloomy wood. Fifty batteries were working on it all the field pieces of the Second division, and what the French would lend. The shells ripped overhead, and the wood was full of leaping flame, and the smoke of H. E. and shrapnel. The fire from its edge died down. It was late in the afternoon: the sun was low enough to shine under the edge of your helmet. The men went forward at a walk, their shoulders hunched over, their bodies inclined, their eyes on the edge of the wood, where shrapnel was raising a hell of a dust. Some of them had been this way before; their faces were set bleakly. Others were replacements, a month or so from Quantico: they were terribly anxiups to do the right thing, and they ’ watched xesiiouhly the sergeants and the corporals and the lieutenants who led the way with canes. One such group, over to the left, followed ,h big young officer, a replacement. too. but a man who had spent a week in Bouresches and was to be considered a veteran, as such things went, in those days, when so many chaps were not with the brigade very long. He had not liked Bouresches. which he entered at night, and where he lived obscenely in cellars with the dead, and saw men die in the orange flash of mitjenwerfer shells, terribly and without the consolation of glory. Here, at last, was attack . . . Hfl thought, absently watching his flank to see that it guided—true-guide center was ( the word—of the old men who had brought him up to the tales of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia, in the war of the Southern confederacy. . —c-ly Sketches From Captain Tholhason’s Notebook. Great battles, glamorous attacks, full of the color and the high-hearted elan of chivalry.. Jackson at Chancellorsville: ITckett at Gettysburg—that was a charge for you—the rei South-, ern battle-flags, leading like tier -e bright-winged birds the locked ranks of fifteen gray brigades, and the screeching "Reber’ yell, and the fieldmusic. fife and drum, rnttling out “The Girl I Left Behind Me”: o Oh. if ever I get through this war, And the Lincoln boys don’t find me. I’m goin* to go right back again To the girl I left behind me— No music here, no flags, no bright swords, ho lines of battle charging with a yell. Combat groups of weary men. in drab and dirty uniforms, dressed approximately on a line, spaceil “so that one shrap e nel-burst cannot include more than one group.” laden like mules with gas-masks, bandoleers. grenades, chaut-chaut clips, trudging forward without haste and Ut ex< itement. they moved on an untidy wood where shells were breaking, a wood that did not answer back, or show an enemy. In its silence and anonymity it was far more sinister than any flag-crowned rampart. or stone walls topped with crashing "volleys from hones! old black powder muskets—he considered these things and noted that the wood was very near, and that the German shells were passing high and breaking in the rear, where the support companies were waiting. Hl* own artillery appeared to have lifted its range: you heard the shells farther in. in the depths of the wood. The air snapped and crackled all around, The sergeant beside the lieutenant stopped, looked at him with a frozen, foolish smile,, and

Poisoned Dart From Blowgun Not Deadly

The blowgun. in which a poisoned darrt is driven by the breath of the Operator to Its victim, is used by various savage tribes in South America, but the Jatnamadys. a tribe of Indians in Brazil, use It with a paralyzing poison to numb their game temporarily so that they can capture it with ease and keep it and fatten it until wanted. So says J. B. Steere of the National museum. . A young. Indian hunter showed Mr. Steere how this blowgun. a weapon 11 feet loug. is used. A monkey in the top of a tall tree was used as a target. The Indian selected a tiny arrow from the quiver that hung by his side and dipped the Up in poison be carried In a small native flask. Then he aimed bis long wooden gun. sighting by means of a lump of beeswax stuck at the tip and with a powerful blast from his lungs expelled the arrow. The monkey stopped his chattering almost instantaneously and tumbled down through the thick branches which broke his falL The little animal seemed quite dead. The Indian held the body in one hand and took a pinch of something white Proposing With Flowers While the Swiss mountaineer, is a stolid, unromantic man. as a rule, yet he has a pretty custom of proposing by flowers. In the Bernese Oberland if a maid accepts a bowjnet of edelweiss from a man she at the same time accepts him as her fiance, the idea being that the man has risked his life to obtain the flowers for the woman he loves.

TTTF ’ KX M

crumpled into a heap of old clothes Something took the kneecap off th> lieutenant's right knee and his leg buckled under him. He noticed, as he ! fell sideways, that all his men were ! tumbling over like duck-pins; there : was one fellow that spun around | twice, and went over backward with i his arms up. the wheat shut him j in. and he heard cries and a moan- j ing. He observed curiously that he | was making some of the noise him- I self. How could anything hurt \ He sat up to look at his knee—it was bleeding like the deuce! —and as he felt for his first-aid packet, a bullet seared his snoulder. knocking him on his back again. For a while he lay quiet and listened to odd. thrashing noises around him, and off to the left a man began to call, very plt<fully. At once he heard more ma-chine-gun tire —he hadn't seemed to hear it before—and now the I bullets were striking the ground and riewheting with peculiar whine in every direction. One ripped into the dirt by his cheek and filled his eyes and his mouth with dust. The la- ; mentable crying stopped; most of the crawling, thrashing noises stopped. He himself was hit again and again, up and down his legs, and he lay very still. ' Where he lay he could just see a tree-top —he was that near the wood. , A few leaves clung to it; be tried to calculate, from the light on them, how lbw the sun was. and how long it would be until dark. Stretcher bearers would be along at dark, surely. He heart! voices, so close that he could distinguish words: “Caput?” “Nein-nicht alles —** Later, forgetting those voices, he tried to wriggle backward into a shellimle that he remembered passing. He was hit again, but somehow he got into a little shell-hole, or got his body into it. head first. He reflected that he had bled so much that a headdownward position wouldn’t matter, and he didn't want to be hit again. Men ail dead, he supposed. He couldn’t hear any of them. He seemed to pass out. and then to have 1 dreamy periods of consciousness. In one of these periods he saw the sky over hltb was dark, metallic blue; it would be nearly night. He heard somebody coming on heavy feet, and cunningly shut his eyes to a slit . . . playing dead. ... A German officer, a stiff, immaculate fellow, stood over him, looking at him. He lay very still, trying not to breathe. The Boche had out his pistol, a shortbarreled Luger, rested it on his left forearm, and fired, deliberately. He felt the bullet range upward through the sole of his foot, and something excruciating happened in ,his ankle. Then one called, and the German passed from his field of vision, returning his pistol as he went. . . . 1 Later, trying to piece things together, he was in an ambulance, being jolted most infernally. And later he asked a nurse by his bed: “I say. nurse, tell me—did we get , the Bois de Belleau?—“Why. last June!” she said. “It’s time you were coming out of it! This is August.” • • The battalion lav in unclean holes on the far face of Bois de Belleau. which was “now United States marine corps entirely.” The sun was low over Torcy. and all the battalion, except certain designated Individuals, slept. The artillery. Boche and Amerlean, was engaged in counter-battery work, and the persecuted infantry enjoyed repose. The senior lieutenant of the Forty-ninth company, bedded down under a big rock with his orderly. came up from infinite depths of slumber with his pistol out. all In one swift motion. You awoke like that in the Bois de Belleau. . . . Jennings, company runner, showed two buck-teeth at him and said: Sir. the cap’n wants to see you—" They crawled delicately away from the edge of the wood, to a trail that took you back under cover, and found the captain frying potatoes in bacon grease. "Going out tonight, by platoons. Start 'aS soon as It’s dark, with the Seventeenth.*^We are next Sixth regiment outnt makin* the relief —Ninety-sixth company for ns. They’ve been here before, so you needn't leave anybody to show them the ground. Soon as they get to you, beat it. Got a sketch of the map? Have your platoon at Bols-Jlros-Jean-—you know, beyond Brigade, on the big road —ht daylight. Battalion has Chow there. — Got it? —G»»od —’’ (TO BE CONTZNWED.)

from a pouch he carried and rubbed it into the wound. Then he put the moukey into a bag and started for home. He bad gone but a little way when the creature revi-ved and became as lively as ever inside the bag. This methed is üßbd to trap many other small animals. Mr. Steere explained. They are not killed but are paralyzed and are taken home, where they are fattened and kept until they are used for food. His Opportunity Lost The small boy had received many presents on his birthday, but the best ofaal a real watering can—arrived Just as be was going to bed. and despite his tears and protests the owner of this treasure was told that he could not use it till next morning. Soon after dawn his mother heard howls of anguish from the garden, and. looking out. she discovered that these came from her small son, who stood in a drenching rain clad only in bis nightshirt, grasping the cherished can in his hand. • “What on earth is the matter?” demanded the anxious mother. “Oh. oh, oh!” wailed the disappointed one. "I did so want to water the garden, and now God’s been and done it!” Fortune in Short Order The popular song. “Rock Me to Sleep.” which brought its composer a fortune, was the result of but ten minutes’ work. A sturgeon, during the fish’s norma l lifetime, will lay 7 (Xd.ooo eggs.

w FEEDING TRIALS FOR THE CHICKS Feeding trials during 1926 on the experiment station poultry farm at Rutgers university have shown that by means of a new ration it is possible to make White Leghorns average pounds tn weight when eight weeks old and show steady gains to a maturing weight of four pounds. i The new ration used was designed to meet all nutritive requirements of birds raised in confinement for the prevention of coccidiosis, black head, round worms and tapeworms, and consisted of the following ingredients: Twenty pounds of wheat bran, 20 of ! Red Dog flour, 20 of yellow corn meal (whole ground corn), 20 of ground rolled oats, 10 of meat scop (50%). 5 of dried milk, 2 of oyster shell meal. I of salt and 1 quart of cod liver oil. The scratch ration consisted of 2 parte | of fine cracked cc4n and 1 part of fine i cracked wheat For the poultrymen who wish to ■ u.*e this ration the jh nitty department gives the follow Erections: ' tor First Three Day—Give milk to drink, either sour s* u milk or a eommercifil condensed skim milk or buttermilk. These two commercial products must b< diluted one part in sAen parts of water. It is preferable to continue feeding the milk indeflnftely, thus promoting best possible growth. , *\ ' Three Days to One Week —Feed mash in pans twice daily, all the chicks will eat in 20 minutes; scratch feed 3 times daily, all they will eat in 20 minutes. One Week to Twenty Weeks—Furnish plenty of mash hopper space, add fresh mash daily. Give scratch feed three times daily. Green feed must i be tender and succulent; feed small amounts at start, then increase to what the chicks will eat in 15 minutes. Infertile eggs fipm the incubator, boiled, make a splendid delicacy for the chicks. When birds are in confinement, allow 300 chicks to a brooder pen, 10 by 12 feet in site. When the are given free range allow 350 to 400 chicks to the flock. Remove all males four to five weeks j of age. Furnish perching space early to prevent crowding. Fresh Air and Light Are Best for Growing Chicks Plenty of fresh air and light are necessary to get the best results with growing chicks. In addition to ventilators in the back of the house, both at the plate and at the floor line, the windows should be adjustable. When the weather permits, the lower sash may be removed in order to admit more direct sunlight. In a 10 by 12 brooder house it is desirable to have at least four 4-light sashes made of 12 by 14 panes. Brooder-house temperatures should be kept as uniform as possible and to this end the walls and floors must b-> tieht. Drop siding for walls should be put on dry. If it Is put on wet it may dry out, crack and open up. Double wail construction has not always proved satisfactory because It is hard to keep such houses free of mites. Feed Costs of Growing Pekin 6ucks for Market The feed cost of growing Pekin ducks to ten weeks«of age. when they weigh from five to six pound*. Is estimated at from 13 to 15 cents a pound. Green ducks are marketed from April to November, and bring from 20 to 45 cents a pound when sold to commission men at wholesale.. The highest prices are paid for ducks marketed early in the spring, decreasing as the season advances and the supply l>ecotnes more abundant. The demand for green ducks has been built up in. large cities in the East and on the Pacific coast, and there is very little demand for such ducks in small cities and towns. Many farmers market their ducks in the fail as spring ducks at a lower price per bird than is received for green ducks in the spring! z . •

Turkey Eggs in Incubator Turkey eggs are su<>-sfully hatched in any liicubator which will do effective hatching of chicken eggs The incubator is being used more an-! more for this purpose each year and some of the largest turkey producers hatch exclusively with the incubatoi and raise the turkeys with artificial brooders. The young turkeys must bf kept clean and dry. especially during the first four weeks. Turkeys do not require quite as much heat as chickens. Feather-Eating Hens Feather eating is a habit that seen** to occur most often when the hens are idle, and hungry for something which seems to be iackins in the ration. The best remedy is to turn the hens on range where they will separate and become interested hi scratching for a living. Feed a balanced dry mash containing meat scrap and this may reduce the feather pulling. Hang a piece ot raw beef in the house for the hens to peck at Loyal Male Guinea As with some other birds, the male guinea is very steadfast during the brooding season. While the eggs are being hatched by the hen. the male remains cio«e by, ready at the least sign of danger to utter his shrill cry of alarm. When the brood appears he shares the responsibility of food and shelter, and should misfortune over ; take the hen he assumes her duties, j Like young turkeys. y >ung guineas I cannot resist the effects of getting

iP'SA j( r W \/ »))* ) V- > I L ( Ji MOTHER:- Fletcher’s toria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, ... Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it

Frozen Dave—“ Bill married a cool million.” Ted —“Yeah, but he hasn't thawed out a cent yet.”

@ HORSES COUGHING? Use Spohn’s Distemper Compound to break it up and get them back in condition. Thirty years' use has made “SPOHN’S” indispensable In treating Coughs and Colds. Influenza and Distemper with their resulting copnflications. and al 1 diseases of the throat ■>oee and lungs. Acta marvelopdy as preventive; acts equally well as eute. cents and >1.20 per bottle /t drug stores. Write so? FREE BOOKLET. SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY. DEPT. BX. GOSHEN. INDIANA

Any More Like This? F. L. Rollins of Laconia. N. H.. reports that his record of being the son of a father who was alive when George W;istiington was President, has been equaled in his own city by Mrs. Bertha A. Dearborn, who is the daughter of Stephen N. Morse of Xsliland, : born >ril 11, 17HX. He was sevpnr - five years of age when Mrs. I>earborn was born. —Indianapolis News. Now Sound Travels Sound travels more than tour times as fast through water as through air. points out an answered question in Liberty. Through water, sound travels j at 4.700 feet a second ; through air. j at 1.090 fee* a second.

f \ ’ \lh (bays Mpiri N Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Lumbago Colds Neuritis Neuralgia Headache Pain Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART s'* Accept only “Bayer 0 package /"Vwhich contains proven directions. > j Handy “Bayer’* boxes of 12 tablet* < Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aaplrln 1* th* trale mark of Burr Manufacture of Mcnoaotlcacldeater of SallcyUcacld A aas mask for miners has been Transmissions of the Moscow RDXV develT[>e<l that" can be carried tn a broadcasting station are easily reeeivpocket. being little larger than a to- able in London at almost any hour bacco can. °t the day. ~ K9KW Bringing BffSJ . U P \i> Ou ■ Children <Y sisters, my sister-in-law and myself all have IVI families, and for years we have all given our children Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. We have recommended it hundreds of times and think it just wonderful, not only to bring up children but for ourselves. At the slightest sign of stomach trouble, colds, constipation and when out of sorts, a dose or two is all they need. Truly, it is a family medicine and the 2tch in time that saves nine.” (Name and addm* tet on Constipation, Colds, Coughs, Fever* cwuf Other Perils of Childhood Wj One dose and mother’s anxiety is lifted. The sickest /Sjdß stomach craves the taste of Syrup Pepsin, frrom infancy to old age the result is certain. Droopy, listless, feverish children respond as if to magic. Headache, stomachache, biliousness, coated tongue, con- | | stipation—these are the daily perils for which a host I of mothers say Dr. Caldwell s Svrup Pepsin is the safeguard. Sold and recommended by all druggists. SXHIJP x >—Cuticura Preparations r ¥ for All the Family : S) For generations Cuticura Soap and OintV J meat have afforded the purest, sweetest and r most satisfactory method of pt omoting and / x maintaining a healthy condition of skin x-J and scalp. Tender-faced men find the xx fer - - *'s£ / px, freely-lathering Cuticura Shaving Stick a \\ J '•_/* Ty <L necessity. Cuticura Talcum is an ideal \ V / cooling and refreshing. I Soap Me., Oa><—•» »te. Taleaajle, SoUerorrA v Where. Suute eerfi free. Address: -OaSian likwaf V l l J •■<■■> D*P<- S 3? M»W>, Mia " tfS- Catioara Stevia* Stick Xse. L*— ? 1

Explanation Bill—Oh. *s he enyXy-headed t Jerry—Sure, he was raised on a vacuum bottle.

Greep’s August Blower

For Indigestion, Dyspepsia, etc. Relieves Distress after Hurried Meals or Overeating. Being a gentle laxative, it keeps the digestive trapt working normally. 30c & 90c. At all Druggists., G. G. GREEN, Inc. WOODBURY, N. J. With Ideas > “Can you give me an idea for a ; movie?” “Yes. But why upset the whole movie business?”