The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 February 1932 — Page 7
I SAVE 50! A WEEK Sr I’m getting about 35 cigarettes from each pack of TARGET 1 • I SWITCHED from ready-made ciga* j rcttes to the hew Target Tobacco, and I've been saving over fifty cents • week ever since. “Bus that isn’t all. The cigarettes X roll from Target look and taste like ready-mades. I even find them consistently fresher. ’Target is real cigarette tobacco. It’s a blend of Virginia, Burley and Turkish, just like the ready-tnadea use. That's what you get when you put put a dime for Target—3o to 40 of the best cigarette* you ever tasted. And who __ doesn't appreciate a real saving these days? "And you get 40 gummed paper* tree with every package.” AND GET THIS The U. S. Government Tas on 20 ci*«rett«a > mounts to 6 cents. On 20 o**c«lc* you roll tram Tvgct tobacco the tax is just about ooa cent. And where there is aaste las on ci*a- . relics, you save that much more. Unites. «* offer you a MONEY-B AC iK GUARANTEE of complete satisfaction. Try a package. If you don't aay they're the best you ever tolled, ret urn the half «"l>ty package, and your Wore man wiU return your duna. US# ■ ©•«!»» The ReolCigareffe Tobacco Brown & WiUtamsna Tobacco Corporation, Launvilic. Ky. Whole Show “Yes.” said the sweet young thing. , Tam going to study la Hf. and become | a lawyer.” " “Why not just got married and be* come the lawyer,|Judge and Jury?'— ; . Ctwcinoati SnQoljtr. I Sickness is Sometime* a mask worn I by laziness. IF YOUR WATCH IS ON THE BUM ! W* clean, repair and completely over- 2y7v ) haul any watch *ir* * for only t S SIS Ik@\ i manship, 10 / jrjsars* experl. , ' > once. All work ■SHE'# guaranteed on* Fwa year. Small extra charge for replacing brok- r en parts. Will i send estimate. YOUR WATCH IS INSURCD j We insure your watch against loos or damage when In our bands, MAIL COUPON TODAY For FREE Shipping Box Write your name and nddres* on coupon below and mail it to ua today. We'll send you FREE a watch shipping box in which you ean mail your watch back to si without worry or trouble. %' ■ r—- ■ To: American Watch RepalrlnffCb. | .* | JOS.V YictoriaSt.. Mishawaka. Jnd. | I please send me FREE a shipping I J box for my watch. J . I I I Name . I I I j Address { I » « ii.fr —», ‘ ’V'""" ;' Jj Sunshine ****■, —All Winter JLong At the foremost Desert Resort «f the West morveteue dueate wena teeny ; days—clear starlit nights—dry invigorating asr — splendid roads — gorgeous mountain , scenes finest hotels —the ideal winter home. ; Write ores A MsflSy PALM SPRINGS . CmUfmrmlm Safe Essays * “Were there cries of'-Vothor! Author P when your play was produced?” “Ye*, but I was running too fast for them!“ Bedridden with Rheumatism
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News Review of Current Events the World Over Japan’s Military Seizure of Shanghai Creates Dangerous Situation —China Demands Forcible Steps by „ League of Nations. By EDWARD W. PICKARD
MORK trouble for the world develops in the Orient Japan, push Ing her campaign to put an end to the anti-Japanese boycott in China and
with the added provoYatlon of riotous demonstrations against her Natio n. a I s In Shanghai, assembled 24 worships at that great port, and the .military occupation «f the city was begun h.v a force of about n.««' marines. To protqft t’ne foreign settlement, four re g i roe nt s of American marines and several battalions of
Dr. W. W. Yen
British troops were standing by, and warships of those nations were hurrying to the scene. Meanwhile, before the council of thj League of Nations In Geneva Dr. W. \V. Yen. the Chinese minister to the United States, set forth his country's side of the 'Controversy and demanded that the council enforce the league covenant without delay. In Washington President Hoover and Secretary of State ,Stimsrtp were considering what America might do In the crisis. They proposed in Great Britain that the two inations apply economic embargoes ojr boycott* to trade with Japan, hut th£. MacDonald government .seemed reluctant to do anything more than to dispatch warships for the protection of the international settlement. The mayor of Shanghai had yielded to the Japanese demands, but w*\V demands'were pm forward and immediately ' thereafter the Japanese marines were landed' and proceeded to seize Chapel, the Chinese quarter. As they swept through the district they encountered the -desperate resistance Os several thousands Chinese troops, whrenpon planes were, brought into action and Chnpei was 'thoroughly bombed. Conflagrations v nearly destroyed the densely populated quarter and the fatalities were undoubtedly heavy. The bloody battle continued for hours and at one time the Chinese defenders had recaptured the important north railroad station. The Japanese had pr« \ vu.s \ i !«• tin r way a. ross the WhansToo river to Pootung, site of big Japanese cotton mills, and evident ly Intended to advance further into|' Chinese territory. Also they had shelled and occupied Woosung, the fort at the month of, tba Wbanspoe. Their warships at. the mine time had gone n;> the Yangtze and tnree cruiser* were lying off Nanking ready to* shell that., capital city. The Chinese Nationalist government was busily mobilizing all Its Strength and railing on the League of Nations for help. Cliiang Kai slick, former president, wa, made premier and apparently was virtually tlie dictator. U7HAT course the Cnited States PHE government would follow.whs vm c-rtuin. hut. ilie~stifrehlng of its |h>Hc>. toward Japanese encroachments Wa - ••d by the sending <*f four more warships to '*’Jdne.se waters frqtn Mnnila. They were destroyer* and their e was requested by tl*ur. Admiral Y S. Williams, commander of the Yangtsp patrol: s.s-reiary Stimsmi cable to Tokyo asking the Intentions of Japan and received what was called a teas 'reply, but it was stated in Washington th.it President lldov.-r was proceeding on thy 'theory, that J-1j >an would he violating international iaw If she landed on (Clones** soil for any purpose hut the protection of Jhpancse Nationals and their property. Rti-shi came Ipto the picture again when Japan asked permission to use the Chinese Hasten! railway in Manchuria to transport troops to Harhin, where Chinese soldiers were marauding. Russia flatty refused the request, stating if intended to observe neutrality. - ■ WHEN the league council had heard both Dr. ’W. \V. Yen and Naotake Sato, the Japanese delegates. Joseph Panl-ltoncour. who replaces! Rriand as chairman, warned Japan to go easy at Snanghal. He admitted that the situation was grave. Yen not only retie* on the pine-poWer treaty and the Kellogg pact, but he also threatened to Invoke Article XV of the league covenant, which Is followed by Article XVI. and the latter Is the r>ne that provides for sanctions against nation* that resort to war. Furthermore, "war” might well made to cover'' such operations ns those of the Japanese against the so-called Chinese bandits. Some of the nations in the league are mighty timid in the matter of sanctions. Yen in hi* talk took « stronger position than the Chinese have previously, taken before the council and his characterisation of the art* of Japan was forcible and uncompromising. He complained, too. about the slowness tn the formation of the league's »commission of Inquiry ami In its getting to Manchuriau where It will not arrive until April. HAYING abandoned the reparation* conference in Lausanne. France and Great Britain are atiil trying to solve the problem without the aid of , the Cnited States. Premier l.aval in conversation with Lord Tyrrell. British ambassador, suggested a temporary plan, calling for a moratorium on reparations until after the American elections. The moratorium would expire before December 15, when the next French payment to the Cnited States la due. After the French elections in May and before expiration of the new moratorium a conference would be called at Lausanne or elsewhere to ißcetlate a- permanent agreement. Such a plan would be tn Hoe with the American attitude that Germany's V. *
reparations creditors agree among themselves before the question of adjusting war debts is broached. Under the' Laval plan, payment of unconditional reparations installments would be made to the World bank at Basel and loaned back to Germany, as under the present Hoover moratorium. which expires next June Stilt was understood the premier suggested that France and Great Britain try lo reach an agreement at the exp ration of the proposed new moratorium as to the amount Germany is to pay. The proposal was regarded here as a step toward ah interview between Premier Laval and Prime Minister MaePonuKJ of Great Britain. ON'K .notable result of the. whole Manchurian affair is the announced determination of Sir Eric Drummond to relinquish, early next
year, his position as secretary general of the I.eague of Nations. He has held that office since the days' of the peace conference ami .has ' been a most Important figure In the or gun iration. Several governments sharply criticized the secretariat because of the extreme position taken by the league at the lw»ginning of
tHc Manchurian embrogiio. and some diplomat a accused Sir Eric of trying to forw the powers into committing themselves to action in defense of the covenant' which might hare led to war with Japan. Sir Eric was- evidently disgusted with what he considered' the weak action of the league l council, especial iy at the Paris session, and felt that the league had suffered great loss of prestige. The other league officials do Y.ot wish to lose his services and it was considered possible they might prevail on him to change his mind about resigning. This, however, seemed likely only if the council would take a. sterner attitude toward Japan. SEVERE loss was sustained by both the business and . the sporting world In the dehth of William Wrigley, Jr., which occurred at his winter home in Phoenix, Art*. The Chicago capitalist, known, universally as the magnate of chewing gum and the owner of the Chicago Cubs of the National Baseball league, had many other and S vast interests, including banks, mines, real estate projects and the moving picture Industry. , Born In Germantown. Pa., 70 years ago. Jie ran away at the age of eleven and started business in New York as a newsboy In 1891 he went Vo Chicago and formed his own company, which soon began the manufacture of chew i _ gum and wax vastly successful. Alt his varied : enterprises resulted* in bringing Mr. Wrhrley a great for i tune. Estimates by his associates ranged anywhere from $30,000,000 to sit mux Mt.tiiO. He was "the majority stockholder in the Sii3.ono.Ooo William Wrigley Jr company, whose earningsin Brio exceeded $12,000,000. In 11*10 Mr. Wrigley became financially interested In-the Chicago baseball club and Within the last years he acquired the majority ownership. Each wiqter he sent the players to Catalina island, which he owned, for their prat-tiee. He was an unostentatious philanthropist, giving many thousands to hospitals and other charitable institutions. ODe of bis associates said of him: Vv “William Wrigley never hurt any one. never trimmed anybody. He was the most liberal of big He never tried to bargain nor/to buy a business cheaply. He did business by the golden rule." WHATEVER ma; be the final outcome. Lieut. Thomas H. Massie of the American navy, his mother-in-law. Mrs. Granville Fortescue. and E.
J. Lord and Albert O. ’Jones, will not have to pay the deith penalty for the killing of Joseph Kahahawai in .Honolulu, si spected jr attacker of Mrs. Hassle. The four defendants in the sensational ease were indicted by the grand Jury to Honolulq, but the charge is secood degree murder, the penalty for which Is 20 years to life Impris-
2 - Mr*. Granwill* Forteseu*
ontuent. A transcript of proceedings of the grand jury Indicated that body attempted to make a report earlier and that Circuit Judge Criaty refused It The transcript revealed he pleaded with them to “lay aside race prejudice," to consider crimes as defined by statutes, not as defined by individuals. Ortsty repeatedly told the grand Jurors that whether the accused four should be punished for killing the Hawaiian was a question for the trial Jury to decide, attacked the indictment on the ground that the grand Jury was coerced by the Judge. D ARTMOOR penitentiary, the historic English prison near Plymouth. was the scene of a violent mutiny la which more than 300 convicts f fought desperately all one day with the guards and police- The rioters, who were enraged because no sugar was served with their porridge, burned the principal buildings before they were subdued. There were no fatalities. hut 95 of the prisoners were wounded. *
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
CUBA'S financial affairs were aired before the senate finance committee and It was revealed that a son-in-law of President Machado had a part in a loan of $50,000,000 made by the Chase National bank to that country, j Carl J. Schmidlapp, a vice president ; of the bank, said $500,000 had gone to Jose Obregon as an official of the Chase company's Cuban branch for distribution to the banks that took part In the loans. He said the relative of the Cuban president had only a minor part in negotiating the loan and denied he was employed for that, purpose. Herbert D. Brown, 'chief of the United States bureau of. efficiency, testified that a report he had made of conditions in Panama had been changed by officials of the National City bank. He said his report had pointed out away by which the country could avoid borrowing, but that the bank went ahead and—h»a,ned u $4,000,000. HUEY LONG Os Louisiana finally abandoned the governor's chair and went to Washington with his pink pajamas and took the oath of senator, j Correspomlehts and visitors to the j National Capital anticipate that his presence in the upper chamber will : provide many interesting incidents, j Before being sworn in Senator Long | told interviewers that the Democratic ; party was sure to lose if it nominat- : ed Franklin 11->osevelt for Presideut. : but con id iii»t be beaten if ity choice j was ether .Pat Harrison. Robinson or j Garner. His fourth ehriice. he said, was AI Smith. He asserted that pro- J hi hit ion is not a party issue and j should have no plate in a platform. Back in Louisiana Paul. N. Cyr for the second time took the oath of office as governor and prepared to file suit to oust Alvin O. King, named by Long as governor when he went to Washington. Mr. King occupied the executive offices in Baton Rouge and had heavy guards stationed there. TWICE in two days the advocates of a large navy "ere badly Jolted.* Hirst the house naval committee .igreed- to shelve, the Vinson ten-year warship authorization hill, though giving the measure, its approval. Then the naval committee of the senate indefinitely postponed action on the Hale bill authorizing alf warships needed to bring the navy up to the tonnage limits allowed by the London treaty. CHARLES G. DAWES, president of the Reconstruction ration, and Eugene Meyer, chairman of the board, were busy getting ready
Sir Eric Drummond
to start the machinery of the huge concern, and the senate committee on banking had before it the names of two Democrats appointed members of the board by President Hoover. They were Harvey C. Couch of Arkansas and Jesse 11. Jones of Texas.
Final approval of the $500,000,000 treas- “ 7 ury investment in the reconstruction corporation was given in both branches of congress to a report reconciling the different provisions of the senate and house. Both political parties were supporting the nest item on the President’s program, which was to give aid tc depositors in closet! banks through a corporation to make loans on sound but unliquid assets in those institutions. Two. bills were under consideration, one drafted by Republicans and providing merely for the establishment of this corporation, and the other introduced by Se#f|or Glass directed mainly at overhauling the country's banking system. a povel proposal to safeguard,, bank depositors against the collapse of financial institutions through government insurance was put forward by 1 Senator Lewis of Illinois. He-offered a bill to set up a government bureau ; of insurance protecting all national | or federal reserve member bank de- j positors. premiums being charged each bank, with further appropriation to cjover tosses If necessary. REAR ADMIRAL MOFFETT. chief j of the naval bureau of aeronau- ! tics, told the house naval committee j that the .airship Akron was far supe- j rior to any other airship ever built.; I and Immediately afterward E. C. Davidson, general secretary of the International Association of Machinists, related to the committee the story of how an Investigation of the materials used is the Akron which two men charged were faulty led to the dismissal of the men by the Goodyear company. Many defects were left in the airship, according to the two men. E. C. McDonald. an Inspector, and \V. R. Underwood. a workman. Admiral Moffatt denied the allegation. made in a letter, that tfie Akron would -collapse from her own weight” if forced to land without a mooring mast. He said the airship could carry five small or four large airplanes, which would not need wheels because they are handled by trapexe arrangement on their upper wings. “The removal of these wheels would make the planes faster than any we have,**" Moffett testified. WHAT was denominated a Com munist uprising troubled the government of Salvador, but martial law was proclaimed and the revolt was quickly suppressed. On the other side of the world. In Kashmir, thousands of Moslems were reported to be looting and burning the homes of Hindus, and the maharajah appealed to the British for help. Disturbances continued in Spain, where the government was confronted with an attempt to set up a proletarian dictatorship. The decree disbanding the Jesuits of Spain was put Into effect and the property of the order catedFIFTY SIX men perished when the British submarine M-2 went down near Portland and failed to come up again. It was reported that the vessel exploded. (A IMS, Western Newspaper Union.)
| Who Was 1 Who? I | By Louise M. Comstock | ALICE BEN BOLT THERE’S “a slab of the granite so gray” in one of those tiny old cemeteries Just off the main automobile highway two miles east of Tazewell. Va.. under which, they say. “Sweet Alice lies”; the same timid, brown-haired Alice of that familiar song, “Ben Bolt" It doesn’t matter that the name carved on the tipsy old stone is not Alice, but Olivia, for Olivia Wynne, a girl who lived In an old brick house the road from the cemetery andMied there early in the Nineteenth century. The countryside has long cherished the legend that Alice and Olivia were the same j girl. j The story is an old one, of the country girl of sheltered life who fell in ; love with tlie stranger with, the city ! ways, this time an itinerant music ! master, who was engaged to teach her j the not nnromantic art of. playing the J melodeon. There were plans for a j wedding, the stranger’s departure to | “make arrangements.” the girl’s lovI -lng dreams over her trousseau and i the fatal letter revealing the perfidious music master to be-already marj rietl and a man of considerable family. Olivia died, as a true heroine of the period must, of broken heart. In 1842 Dr. Thomas Dunn English of Pennsylvania visited his Intimate friend (’apt. William Edward Peery, then owner of tlie old Wynne homestead. was captivated by legend, and subsequently wrote the words of the familiar ballad. They were later set to music by Nelson Kneass and the song achieved lasting fame when Du Maurier Introduced it Into his novel, the famous "Trilby.” • • • ABELARD AND HELOISE IN THE Paris cemetery ok Pere-La-chaise, on summer Sundays, the sentimental still lay wreathsXon the tomb of two lovers, who dtedMlmost Si mi years ago but are hero a nd\ heroine of a love story which still wives on in the famous “Love Lettert of Abelard and Heioise.” Abelard was a brilliant and handsome young professor who by the fime he was twenty-five was attracting thousands to his open-air speeches for the rights of the individual to make his own*intellectual investigations. In time he came to verbal blowswith the venerable St. Bernard turn self, who stood for traditional authority and strongly condemned the young radical. In 1117 Abelard was hired by tlie canon of the Episcopal school in Paris to tutor his beautiful niece Heioise, theni just seventeen. The pair fell madly in love and fled together to Brittany, wliere there was a secret marriage. Tlie relatives of Heioise followed the couple, found and separated them, and the canon further hired men to Invade Abelard’s rooms and brutally mutilate him. Abelard in despair entered the monastery of St. Denis, and Heioise. at his instigation, became a nun and foreswore even her memories of him. Ten Years later Heioise learned that his retirement had not brought her foyer and wrote hi.ni the first of flveNJnmous lpve letters in which is revealed the tragedy of two noble souls who" tried to forget each other but could notj Abelard died in 1142; twenty years later. * $ . * HAEUN AL-RASCHID A LMOST as thrilling as Sinbad. or Aladdin, or any of the faseinasl ing tales by which Scheha/.erade through a “Thousand and One Nights” entertained the caliph »f Bagdad and saved her own life, is the story of the caliph himself. f The caliph of the “Arabian Nights” j , was Hanm al-Kaachld, ruler of Bagdad during its palmy days in the Eighth century. His story is made up of the very stuff of romance: harem Intrigues, poisonings, splendid gifts, hideous torments, with which his highhanded slaughter of many brides after a single night of marriage is quite Compatible, though not authenticated by history. Schehazerade. who won his permanent affection by her gifts as story-teller, was a lady of high birth. Ilarun al-Raschid was son of the Caliph Mahdi and a freed slave girl, who ordered his own concubines to kill her eldest son, the rightful heir, in order to set tier youngest and favorite in the throne of an empire then .extending from Spain to India. At i first, under the wise administration j of his grand vizier. Yahia the Barme- | cide, the empire flourished and Harun devoted himself to luxury, pleasure and the arts. Later a quarrel between the caliph and the barmecides led to the execution of Yahia. his four sons and qll their descendants, and the ultimate downfall of the empire Th rebellious disorder. The caliph himself died in a manner quite unworthy of a fairy story hero—of apoplexy! (ff I*3l. Wextern Xinpaptr Union.) Roman Paving The Appian way was paved with nexagonal blocks of lava, exactly fitted to one another, resting on a substructure of considerable depth. There may still be seen important remains frhich provq its excellent workmanship. Home’s Many “Moving*” Mr*. Alice Borden’s farmhouse has been in three towns and two states without ever being moved. The site once was a part of Tiverton, R. I-, later belonged to Fall River, Mass, and now is in Westport, Mass. Nativ* Iriab CntUn Kerry cattle have existed in Ireland from remote times. The Kerries are ail that are left of the early native cattle The others have been eradicated by imported cattle
! / »I 4 |; y'MfcMjlfr IT, "t
Hindus Eager to Draw j Chariot of Juggernaut The carriage of the great god Juggernaut now rumbles through the streets of Puri, India, a trifle faster Milan usual. This is due to the large number of policemen on hand, who hurry up the festival as one of the many precautions taken to prevent suicides. Juggernaut's chariot has thirty-two wheels, wide of rim, seven feet in diameter, and it is under these that impulsive-devotees as part of the centuries-old ceremony have east themselves. The Puri festival is one of the most celebrated In the Hindu calendar and annually attracts thousands of pilgrims. Great ceremony attends preparations for the journey of Juggernaut, lord of the universe, and his brother and sister, to the Garden temple, where the three gods pass a week. Hindus believe that when God comes to the earth he incarnates himself in one of the ten forms and that on the day of the festival God incarnates himself as a “Vaman” or dwarf and appears in Juggernaut's car. Those who are fortunate enough to see him, they contend, attain salvation. The orthodox Hindus believe, too.' there is much virtue in aiding to drag the car about a mile, from one end of the town to the other, which accounts largely for the eager! rush to Puri each year. Known a* Sea Unicorn The narwhal, an Arctic whale. Is known also as the “sea unicorn.” Like the dolphin, it travels In schools, but it is seldom seen south of she polar seas. Little is known of it, but in the logs of old-time mariners, j there was frequent report of the piercing of a vessel's hull by a narwhal’s ivory tusks. Because the center of the tusk, or horn, is hollow, ! Ivory of the narwhal has never achieved commercial Importance. 'A Flat on Share* Policeman—See here, you folks can't stay-in tlie park all night. You'll have to go home. Mr. Doubleup—But It’s out turn, officer. We share our flat with another family and they occupy it tonight , • Burning Skin Diseases quickly relieved and healed by Cole's Carbolisalve. Leaves no sears. No medicine chest complete without it. 30c and 60c at druggists, or J. W. Cole Co., Rockford, Ill.—Advertisement. They never will get through finding tombs in Egypt; and that's about all Egyptian civilization amounted to: Swell funerals.
gPPi % wIWKIIHb I Cold Insurance fi «| He carries it with him. ready for just such times. That |ySߣf little box of Bayer Aspirin. If he catches cold, what of it? 111 r j|3 Bayer Aspirin will stop it. If his throat feels sore, he will w* § end the soreness with one good gargle made from these EjHH pj Dangerous complications can follow the neglect of ‘‘a r TO common cold!” Every case of tonsilitis began with “just y a sore throat P’ It’s a wise plan to take aspirin after any I PH undue exposure to bad weather, or whenever there is any HHH Kg chance that you’ve caught cold. If it’s genuine aspirin it nSyapP I can’t possibly hurt you; and how it does banish the aches H ; ■j and pains caused by colds, neuralgia, neuritis, lumbago, and even rheumatism. B Bayer Aspirin will insure your comfort through the . I w’orst cold season. The more susceptible you are to colds, the more you need it. Does not depress the heart. J 1 Still Wanting How to Campaign Peck—My wife keeps telling me Candidate (to campaign manager) that I should have a mission in life. —You issue the dodgers— Heck—Then apparently your sub Manager—And you dodge the is* mission does not satisfy her. *sues. CORRECT iGROWTH
for /Children Too can help your children gain sturdy bones and strong teeth by giving them Scott of Cod Liver Chi daily. (It’s the Vicfcmin D content that docs if.) But there’s «l»r> a wealth of Vitamin A present that builds resistance —in parents as wrfll as children—to such common illnesses as winter colds, it s the pleasant, easy way to take cod liver oil. Scott & Bovnc, Bloomfield, N. J. Sales Representative, Harold F. Ritcpic &. Co., Inc., New York. lam VO tho SebM a Bernmo radio program " Adorn tori* ff with Count worn luakaor.” on Supdap night at 130 p. m. ooor tk* CihmiiaCaoot to Coaat Notmook
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■ Scott’s Emulsion I OF \OR W7 G l/\ X (. 0 D f.fVIR OIL
High Co*t of Art This country purchased $250,000,000 worth of paintings and sculpture in 193a— Collier’s Weekly.
| RELIEVES HEAP, CHEST and BACK COLDS (
I ALBATUM © 1
Stainless "Rub In" and inhalant unsurpassed in preventing and relieving cold congestions McKesson ££>%&,
Dorothy 9 s Mother Proves Claim
Children don’t ordinarily take to medicines but here’s one that all of them love. Perhaps it shouldn’t be called a medicine at aIL It’s more like a rich, concentrated food.
It’s pure, wholesome, sweet to the taste and sweet in your child’s little stomach. It builds up and strengthens weak, puny, underweight children, makes them eat heartily, bring* the roses back to their cheeks, makes them playful, energetic, full of life. And no bilious, headachy, constipated, feverish, fretful baby or child ever failed to respond to the gentle influence of California Fig Syrup on their little bowels. It starts lazy bowels quick, cleans them out thoroughly, tones and strengthens them so they continue to act normally, of their own accord. Millions of mothers know about California Fig Syrup from experience. A Western mother, Mrs. J. G. Moore, 119 Cliff Ave., San Antonio, Texas, says: “California Fig Syrup is certainly all that’s claimed for it. I have that with my little Dorothy. She was a bottle baby and very delicate. Her bowels were weak. I started her on Fig Syrup when she was a few months old and it regulated her, quick. I have used it with her ever since for colds and every little set-hack and her wonderful condition tells better than words how It helps.” Don’t be imposed on. See that the Fig Syrup you buy bears the name, “California" so you’ll get the genuine, famous for: 50 years. I ■ • 1 , •! c' . . • - • : Unfathered Rice “Paddy" is the name given to unhusked rice, whether growing or gathered. g P soothing M A " ointment draws out your % ■ cold like a magnet when rubbed on ■ ■ chest and throat. Eases breathing ■ j * when inserted in stuffy H nostrils. Jars and K XtelcoHS/ Sometimes it's a good thing if it turns out bad.
Foreign Market Basket Europe is now eating American groceries at the rate of $280,000,000 a year.—American Magazine.
