The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 March 1920 — Page 5

Well Known Women Cleveland, Ohio.—“l can highly recommend Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription to women of middle age. I was in a mis-

erable condition a year or s so before I reached the climacteric. My bladder gave me so much distress, and I also suffered with inflammation and displacement. I don’t be- > lieve any woman could be more uncomfortable than I was when I started to take the ‘Fator-

'I L #

ite Prescription.’ My improvement was so slow at first that I became impatient and wrote to the Invalids’ Hotel for advice, which was given me freely, and Very kindly. By following this advice I was eventually restored to a healthy condition. I am now safely through this trying time and have ‘Favorite Prescription’ to thank for my present good health, so do not think that I am making any mistake in advising other women Who are distressed at this time to give Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription a trial.”—Mrs. J. W. Kesler, 2344 E. 76th St. Conneaut < Ohio.—“ln my young womanhood I used to suffer severely at certain times until I took Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. This medicine not only cured me of this condition, but it laid the foundation for a healthy womanhood. I highly recommend the ‘Prescription’ to all young girls who suffer with inward trouble or periodical pains, and I would never hesitate in giving ‘Favorite Prescription’ to my own daughters if they were in need of such medicine.’’—Mrs. Sarah Hilderbrand, 329 Harbor St. * Ashtabula, Ohio.—“l have heard my daughters praise Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription so highly that I do not hesitate to recommend it to other women.” —Mrs. Carrie Whelpley, 607 Lake St.

rKSri NR Tablets tone and strengthen organs of digestion and elimination, improve appetite, stop sick headaches, relieve biliousness, , correct constipation. They act promptly, pleasantly, mildly, yet thoroughly. < i K? Tonight, Tomorrow Alright ( Bad Sickness Caused by Acid-Stomach If people only realized the health-destroy-ing power of an acid-stomach—of the many kinds of sickness and misery (t causes —of the lives it literally wrecks—they would guax;d against it as carefully as they do against a deadly plague. You know in an instant the first symptoms of acid-stomach—-pains of indigestion; distressing, painful bloat; sour, gassy stomach; belching; food repeating; heartburn, etc. Whenever your stomach feels this way you should lose no time in putting it to rights. If you don’t, serious consequences are almost sifre to follow, such as intestinal fermentation, autointoxication, impairment of the entire nervous system, headache, biliousness cirrhosis of the liver; sometimes even catarrh of the stomXch and intestinal ulcers and cancer. If you are not feeling right, see if it isn’t acid-stomach that is the cause of your ill health/ Take EATONIC. the wonderful modern stomach remedy. EATONIC Tablets quickly and surely relieve the pain, bloat, belching, and heartburn that indicate acidJtomach. Make the stomach strong, clean and sweet. By keeping the .stomach in healthy condition so that you lean get full ° atrength from your food, your general health Bteadily improves. Results are marvelously quick. Just try EATONIC and you will be as enthusiastic as the thousands who have used it and who say they never dreamed anything could bring such marvelous relief. So get a big 50-cent box of EATONIC from your druggist today. If not satisfactory return it and he will refund your money. FATONIC MMB C FOR YOUR ACID-STOMACH) Wretchedness OF Constipation Can Be Quickly Overcome by CARTER’S LITTLE 4PV LIVER PILLS. Purely vege. Itf*ADTFD*C table —act sure- I yMIv 1 Lit J and gently on JEK ITT LEE the liver. Cor- SHIVER •ect bilious- , nnii-i c ness, head- q ache, dizzi- > ness and indigestion. They do their duty. Small Pm—Small Dose—Small Prky DR. CARTER’S IRON PILLS, Nature’s great nerve and blood tonic for Anemia, Rheumatism, Nervousness, Sleeplessness and Female Weakness. Genuine asst bear alias tun children who arelTckly

Mothers who value the health Os their children should never be without MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, for use when needed. They tend to Break up Colds, Relieve Feverishnesl, Worms, Constipation. Headache, Teething disorders

t-1 I i i i TRADE MARK '

Don’t accept Stomach Troubles. Bi.y Substitute. Used by Mothers for over jo years. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Trial package FREE. Address THE MOTHER GRAY CO.. LE ROY. N. Y. Louisiana Oil Fields Gushing « Forth Millions of Dollars in Oil HOMER-BAYOU OIL COMPANY Capital SIOO,OOO. Par Value SI.OO Offering for immediate subscription small block of stock for one dollar per share. The early investor catches the profits. ACT NOW! Send your money for big profits. HOMER-BAYOU OIL CO. 311 Levy Bldg- Shreveport. La*

r ..so. »« t <v< w . . w avayya vv<( I- iTffwwn-i l hl ipmr?r^ 4 \ STATE NEWS ) tfesSSSSZKSZSSzJ Evansville—A two-inch snow fell in southern Indiana and northern Kentucky the past week. It was the heaviest of the season and will help the wljeat which, farmers say, has been growing too rapidly. » Muncie. —The Home Builders’ company has let contracts for the immediate construction of 50 houses at a cost of $3,000. to $5,000 each. A survey of the city indicates that 1,000 houses should be built here at oijce if the several thousand tuen who are coming here in the course of the next year to work for the General Motors company are to be accommodated. . Hammond.—Big variations in the opinions of expert realty operators were brought out in superior court here in the trial of a suit in which the Gary park commissioners seek to condemn marsh lands owned by the Tolleston Gun club of Chicago, for park purposes. Values all the way from S3OO to $1,500 were put on the land. The park commission contends that the value of the land should not be based on possible future uses, as it is covered with water several months of the year. Newcastle.—Township assessors in Henry county have worked out a schedule to be followed in assessing farm products this year. Wheat will be listed at $2.20 a bushel and corn at $1.30 a bushel. Hogs will be taken at sl3 and cattle at from 9 to 13 cents a pound. The schedule calf's for the listing of potatoes at $2.50 a bushel, clover seed at S3O a btishel, hay at S3O a tbn and, pork, lard and bacon at 25 cents a pound. The assessors will be permitted, to use thier own judgment in assessing automobiles. Richmond. —According to Lewis King of this city, division safety agent for the Pennsylvania railroad lines, 59 persons were killed and 125 injured in grade crossing accidents on the railroad lines west of) Pittsburgh during 1919. A u t° m °biles figured in 476 of the accidents, 247 struck by trains. The railroad company, according to the statistics, was responsible for 29 of the accidients. A total of 95 other vehicles figured in accidents, and the company accepts the blame in two of the mishaps. \ , Indianapolis.—The plans of organization for the construction and maintenance divisions Qf the state highway commission have been announced by the commission. The construction division will have ) supervision of the work of constructiion of 135 miles of state and federal aid roads and bridges, the contracts for which were let last summer |nd fall, and in addition will supervise county projects, which up to the present time amount to about $2,000,000. The maintenance division will carejfor more than 3,000 miles of state roads, for which a minimum of about $1,500,000 is to be spent iiV-1920. ; ’ Crawfordsville.-j-C. O. Yost, state apigry inspector of the division of entomology of the state conservation department, and Frhnk N. Wallace, state entomologist, wilt attend the annual session of. the beekeepers of Montgom- . ery county, to bd held here March 4. The beekeepers will decide on a date for a tour of inspection of all bee colonies of the cbujnty under the direction of Mr. Yost; Ten beekeepers in any county may j form a county association and affiliate with the State Beekeepers’ association. There are approximately 20,000 beekeepers in Indiana who own about 200,000 colonies of bees. Columbus. —Owners pf three maple sugar camps ip German township. Bartholomew county, predict a short crop of maple sirup forth. present season. Trees numbering 1,200 have been tapped in the three camps and there is a small; yield of sugar water, some of the treejs giving none. Weather conditions hake not been favorable. • Last year the cpmps produced 100 to 150 gallons eaclk of sirup. The price last year ranged from $2 to $2.50 a gallon, while this year it is $2.50 to $3. Warsaw. Construction of roads to cost $300,000 ini Kosciusko county has been held up because of failure to sell rhe bonds. Nine roads are affected. Some of the contractors are trying to market the bon,ds. Muncie.—Demand for the removal from office of Thomas Hiatt, county sheriff; Clarende E. Benadum. prosecuting attorney,; 1 and Timothy B. Owen, “a pretended justice of the peace,” is made in a cbmplaint for injunctive relief filed in ; the Delaware circuit court by Benjamin Mcßride, Charles Jones, Faye Warner, Michael Lyons, Anna Bouminfc, Marie Fisher and George Drennan, who were arrested in a raid conducted by constables from the court of Justice Owen. It is also asked thaf the grand jury now in session be discharged and that a new jury be drawn and ; placed in charge of a special prosecuting attorney “on account of the disqualification of Benadum to act aS prosecuting attorney.”

DOGS ON GUARD AT LOUVRE i— • Extra Watch Is Kept on France’s Palaces Since Fire at Compiegne. Paris. —The’, recent fire in the old royal palace ai Compiegne has caused the department of fine arts to take precautions against further fires or thefts in France’s state palaces. Locks ■vare being placed on the doors of the Compiegne palace, and offices where —- : p. : —7 Cleans White Shoes. ■ ■ St the buckskin uppers of your shoes are soiled you can clean them neatly and cheaply with sandpaper. Buy a sheet of the finest grade, costing a few cents, and cut off a little strip. With this rub the leather gently until all dirt disappears. One sheet of paper will last for a number of cleanings. Again the Painted Hat. After the artist has laid down his brushes, only a little work remains far the milliner to do on the hat of.

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

Shelbyville.— Farmers attending a district institute here went on record as favoring the erection of a communi ty house by the county as a memorial to the world war service men of the county. Brazil.—Because of the car shortage the past week the pay received by coal miners here was the lowest since the armistice; with tDe exception of that received during the strike period. The mines served by the Chicago & Eastern Illinois railroad had good work, but the Pennsylvania was unsuccessful in keeping the mines in cars, with the result that six or eight days in the two weeks’ period was the average for the miners. Lebanon. —Bonds for the construction of seven gravel and cement roads in Boone; county, aggregating $166,600, offered for sale by the county treasurer a few days ago, did not bring out a bid and Contractors will stop work on the roads. No bids have been received on 12 other roads which have been advertised four different times. Contractors), say that the estimates of the engineer are too low and the engineer contends that the estimates are sufficient. Anderson.—L. F. Pence, judge in the Madjson county circuit court, sustained the city council in its answer to a suit by the police force to require the council to make an additional appropriation to pay increased salaries to members of the police force. The answer of the council was that salaries and other expenses had been fixed in; the annual budget and that changes in salaries cannot be made until the next budget is made and the tax levy fixed accordingly. Indianapolis.—Directors of the IndF ana Federation of Farmers’ Associations went on record as favoring a law permitting electric railway lines to haul carload freight, and also a law for transportation in the state whereby freight -shipments would be interchanged and the cost prorated. The directors further voiced opposition to any daylight-saving law, expressing the belief that the farmers’ interests would ;best be served' by letting the clock alone at all times tn the year. Indianapolis.—No interpretation of existing laws can give Indiana women the right td vote for presidential candidates in the May primaries, according to Jan opinion given by two Indianapolis attorneys in conference with Frederick Schortemeier, secretary of the Republican state committee. The opinion coincides with that given recently >by W. W. Spencer, Democratic state ; election commissioner. The Wdmah’s Franchise league has been planning to participate in the primary as we]l as the November election. Evansville. —The annual meeting of the rural mail carriers of ,the First district, held here, brought carriers from jail the counties of the district. Resolutions were adopted at the meeting indorsing the action of the committed .on reorganization at Dayton ,0., and pledging hearty support to the National Federation of Rural Carriers. The resolutions also indorsed the good roads) movement and urged bettei equiphient for the carriers. The First district carriers will in the future affiliate with the American Federation of Labor. Connersville. —Although the influenza epidemic in this county passed its apex several days ago, and the daily releases from quarantine exceed greatly the number of new cases, the influenza commission announces that the need, for more nurses is as acute as everj because of the fact that many entire families are stricken. In one house in Harrison township, 13 persons; members of two families, were ill at one time, and nine are still ill. In this city, half a dozen families, every member of which is ill, are unattended. A call for volunteer nurses has been reissued. Portland—The Jay county board of children’s guardians has been notified that children from this county wilLbp permitted to remain at the Dela warp county children’s home despite the j crowded conditions there. Congestion at the home recently has caused the Muncie guardian board tc notify 7 several ■ surrounding counties that the Delaware county home cannot accomodate their children any longer Counties that have been notified that their children will be returned shortly are Posey, Carroll, Adams and Blackford. Henry and Jay counties wilt be permitted to keep their chil dren at the home. Indianapolis. — The public service commisison in orders issued continued in effect the telephone exchange rates established June 11, 1919, by the postmaster general, in six cities and towns in the Central Union system; in twen-ty-four exchanges of the Southern Indiana Telephone company, and in the eight Indiana exchanges of the Chicago Telephone company.- Decreases In the Burleson rates were ordered in eight cities served by the Central Union, and increases over the federal rates weer authorized in twenty-one Central Union exchanges. The commission also authorized Increases in five of the smaller exchanges in the Southern Indiana systetm.

official documents have been filed since the war began have been ordered removed. Reservoirs and tanks have been built on heights near the Versailles palaces to guard against fire. New precautions against robbery have been taken at the Louvre since the recent theft of a necklace. The interior courts will be kept lighted continuously and the guards will carry powerful lamps, enabling every corner to be searched. Dogs will accompany' the guards in their tours of inspection, taupe Panama; merely to adjust the bow and band of French blue moire ribbon and to put in the facing of bright blue. The painter uses colors almost futuristic —yellow, blue, green, rose. The Busy Househusband. Probably no other system will ever be devised for losing long and valu-i able lead pencils out of one’s waistcoat pocket which will quite* equal for efficiency shaking down the furnace,—Ohio State Journal.

PROBLEMS FACING STRICKENWORLD Shall Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? GREAT NEED IS PRODUCTION Men Must Be Given Inducement to Work and Guaranteed Fair Dealing in the Distribution of the Result. Article VI. By FRANK COMERFORD. The world lives by two kinds of work, the work on the soil and the labor spent in making things. In this way we get the things we eat and wear. We have eaten up our surplus. The world’s reserve is gone. We are literally living from hand to mouth. To overcome jhe food shortage we must put every inch of available ground into production. Only by doing this can we live and gradually get back the surplus which stood as a protection against crop failures. Production is not automatic, ft Is the work of man. There is not anything complex about it. You can’t use magic. To grow things men must plow and gather. The will to work is ouf greatest need. The land is available. God furnishes the sunshine and the rain. To get the plows, tractors and farm tools we must look to the industrial arm of life. Here again is the call for men. We are short of man power. Men were killed and crippled in the war. The men who survived the war must help do the work that would have been done by those who did not come back. In their present frame of mind they do not will to work, at least under the old conditions obtaining before the war. It is necessary to furnish them with an inducement to work. There) was little inducement for men to work before the war. The discontented are not kicking at work. Their objection goes to the unfairness shown in dis-) tributing the result. It isn’t any se-) cret. They are shouting it from the housetops of Europe, they demand a larger share of the things they produce, or they refuse to work. There is a good deal of human nature In it, too. It is only human nature to think of self. There isn’t anything unnatural in the workingman looking for reward. Willingness to work is largely based on the thought of working for oneself. Five things are necessary to start and keep production going. In other words, to get the clothes, shoes, stockings, coal and comforts of life, to give the farmer the tools he needs for agricultural production, so that we may eat; to provide the transportation necessary to collection and distribution, to bring the city to the country and the country to the market we must do five essential things. , Production’s First Need. First, we must have ; plants, and I use the word in the most generial sense. These plants must be equipped with machinery and tools, they must be ready for work. f Second, a plant Is useless and stands Idle unless we provide raw material, the thing furnished by nature that man and machine work into the finished product. Third, we must have coal. Coal runs the machine and keeps warm the home of the man who runs the machine. The helplessness of the worid without coal is brought home to me while I am writing these articles. The miners hijve left the pit. The government, through the courts, has tried to force them back. The effort is a failure. The streets are dark at night. The houses are cold. Business is crying out against necessary restrictions imposed because of the coal shortage. I realize as I never have before how dependent we are on the men who pick and dig the coal. All of the intelligence and culture, the courts, the gold, are but symbols of power. When the Coal miners folded their hands and set their teeth things stopped. Eourth, transportation is necessary to the gathering, collecting and delivering of raw material and the distribution of the finished product.. Fifth, and last, but first in importance, Is man power. The purpose of production is man. He is master of It at every stage. In every department. Without him production Is impossible. The business men who proceed on the theory that men could not live without their business, its pay roll, forget the first and greater truth that there would be no business without the workers. Man cuts, digs, gathers and hauls the raw material. He hews the wood, builds the plant He mines the ore, he makes the tools, the machinery. He oils It sets it in motion. He runs it He makes the furnace and the boiler. He digs and shovels the coal which makes the power. He defies the heat of the furnace. He builds the locomotive and pulls its throttle. He makes the freight car and stands in the sleet ',n the dangerous railroad yard with the signal of safety. Railroads All Worn Out Transportation tn Europe is partly paralyzed. During the war railroad tracks and roadbeds were allowed to deteriorate. It could not be helped, but the fact that it was unavoidable doesn’t alter the situation. Roadbed and rails have fallen to pieces. There is a terrible shortage of cars. Everywhere on the Continent this is felt.

• WALRUS SCARCE IN ARCTIC. The United States should declare a closed season for walrus in the arctic region, according to W. B. Van Vallin, who has recently returned to Seattle after spending three years near Point Barrow, Alaska, searching for Eskimo relics and history for the University of Pennsylvania. White men In powerboats are killing large numbers of walrus, making It impossible for the Eskimos to obtain enough for food, says Mr. Van Vallin.

They haw less than a third of th< rolling stock necessary to meet normal requirements. The demand for transportation facilities will necessarily increase during the period of reconstruction. I have seen locomotives sneezing. coughing. • expiring every few miles. Old. broken-down engines, the kind one expects to find in a museum. I was on a de luxe train, a diplomatic express. I commented upon the condition of the locomotive, which came to a full stop every once in a while. I commented upon the condition of the coaches. The chief of the train looked at me. smiled and said: “If you think this one is bhd you ought to see some of the others.’’ The war disarranged plants and factories. The demand was for munitions. Peace gave way to war and plant equipment efficient for peace production gave way to plant construction necessary to manufacture the weapons of war. Plants were commandeered. Machinery was torn out. new’ machinery put in. A complete reconstruction and reorganization was effected. Now’ that the war Is over and the demand for everything is great, it Is necessary to change these plants back and fit them for the production needed. It is expensive, it takes time, it retards production. It is strange that, while everyone can see and understand the difficulties and delays incident to reorganizing and rearranging machinery and plants, many people cannot see or understand the problem of rearranging men’s lives, who for four years have been living abnormally. The effect of the war upon plants and equipment is conceded by the very man who refused to see any effect of the war on the men who were in it. Women in Labor World. During the war women answered the roll call. They left their homes and went to work. There is hardly a kind of work that I can think of that I have not seen women doing in Europe. 1 have seen them loading boats, shoveling coal, washing windows, driving wagons, cleaning streets, conductors on trams. Many of the women who went into the industries were young women. Now that the war is over and the men have come back there is a demand on the part of the men that the women retire to their homes. This is impossible in many cases, for these women have grown dependent upon their jobs for their living. Then, too, there is a shortage of marriageable men. Some employers of labor have taken advantage of this situation. They pay a woman less money than they pay a man for the same work. This makes both dissatisfied. The woman has the sympathy of the working man. He doesn’t want her to compete with him to the extent that his wages will be lowered, neither does he want the boss to discriminate against her. Women have come into the world of work to stay. If there is any meaning in the phrase “class conscious," they are living examples of it. They are more outspoken about their demands than men. They sense a wrong long before a man can see it. They have brought their intuition Into the labor world. They are more radical than men, and they stimulate men to action. They have brought to the labor problem a new and interesting angle. The key to the future is in the hands of these men and women. Production is the door that must be opened. Men and women must work, or winter and want will make a No Man’s Land of Europe before the sun of 1920 thaws the frost from the ground. Children crying for bread, shivering in the cold these bleak winter nights, are praying that men will work when they pray to God for good and warmth. Their help cries are smothered by a great blanket —unrest. Will men hear them? So I sought to find the causes of unrest, knowing it would bring me clpse to tbe heart of the trouble. (Copyright. 1920. Western Newspaper Union) Dickens’ Tribute to the Cow. If civilized peoples were to lapse Into the worship of animals, the cow would certainly be their chosen goddess. What a fountain of blessing is the cow! She is the mother of beef, the source of butter, the original cause of cheese, to say nothing of shoehorns, haircombs and upper leathers. A gentle. amiable, ever-yielding creature, who has no joy in her family affairs that she does not share with man. We rob her of her children, that we may rob her thereafter of her milk; and we only care for her when the robbery may be perpetrated.—Charles Dickens. Approaching the End. Cicero in his dialogue entitled “De Senectute” makes one of his Interlocutors say that all men wish to attain old age and yet complain of the fact when they have attained it. He that one of the grievances of the old Is that age steals over them more rapidly than they expected. It is pointed out that we cannot prevent time from passing, and that even if we lived eight hundred Instead of eighty years the past time, however long, cannot when it has flown away be able to “soothe with any consolation for an old age of folly.” A Sister Wilhelm Did Not Like. Princess Charlotte of Meningen, sister of the ex-kaiser, who died recently, had been a sufferer for years and had undergone many operations. She passed most of her time on the Riviera. Indeed, the princess was a woman you couldn’t miss. She wore bobbed hair, when no other woman had ever dreamed of such a thing, and talked democracy, and smoked all the time. The exkaiser was rather alarmed at her vagaries and preferred his other sister. Queen Sophie of Greece, who is more his sort. —London ’’Mail.

AIRPLANE ADVERTISING BARRED. Airplane advertising in Altoona, Pa., is taboo. Recently an enterprising young real estate merchant made a flight over the city and dropped out thousands of handbills advertising his business. When the airplane landed an officer was In waiting and the real estate dealer was escorted to the office of Mayor Charles E. Rhodes, where he was fined S2O on the charge of throwing advertising materials or the public thoroughfares.

flavor g? Why are f WRIGLEYS I flavors, like the | I pyramids of Egypt? I I Because they are I I long-lasting. I And WRIGLEY’S is a beneficial as well as long-lasting treat. 1 I It helps appetite and digestion. I keeps teeth clean and breath sweet allays thirst. CHEW IT HFTER EUERY MEAL j Sealed Tight— bAI | I H Kept Right vlhjl , mo ji

ECZEMA CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You All I want is your name and address so I can send you a free trial treatment. I want yon just to try this treatment— tbai 8 all — Just

try been 1 Drug Business for 20 years. lam President of the Indiana Stat, Board of Pharmacy and President of the Retail Druggists Association. Nearly Fort Wayne knows me and knows about my successful treatment. Over twelve thousand five hundred Men, Women and Children outside of Fort Wayne have, according to their own statements, been cured by this treatment since I first made this offer public. h*. If you have Eczema, Itch. Salt Rheum, Tetter-never mind how bad — my treatment has cured the worst Cases I ever saw— give me a chance to prove my claim. Send me your name and address on the coupon below and get the trial treatment I want to send you FREE. The wonders accomplished in your own case will be proof. ibbpbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbi CUT AND MAIL TODAY caaaaaaaaaaaaaaßaaaaauM I. C. HUTZELL, Druggist* No. 3588 West Main St.* Fort Wayne Ind. Please send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment. Name , 1 Age—- — - Post Office State - Street and No ■ ....—- ""

The Right Way in all cases of DISTEMPER, PINKEYE INFLUENZA, COLDS, ETC. of all horses, brood mares, colts and stallions is to c“SPOHN THEM” Sj on the tongue or in the feed with ./ SPOHWS DISTEMPER fiOMPOUND Give the remedy to all of them. It acts on the blood and glands. It routs the N•» disease by expelling the germs. It Itif wards oft the trouble, no matter how Wr St they are “exposed.” A few drops a day J yff prevent those exposed from contract- LMW*' ing disease. Contains nothing injuri- j|>* A . ous. Sold by druggists, harness deal- KS- v. ers or by the manufacturers. 60 cents BgaalS, and $1.15 per bottle. AGENTS WANTED. ' SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY, GOSHEN, IND.

His Only Love Affair. Rose —Did Jim have more than one love affair? Ruby—Only one, I believe. “When he fell in love with you?” “Oh, dear, no! He had fallen in love with himself long before we ever met.” —London .Answers. Pure blood is essential to good health. Garfield Tea dispels impurities, cleanses the system and eradicates disease.—Adv. One today is worth two tomorrows.

NAME “BAYER” ON GENUINE ASPIRIN "Bayer Cross” on Aspirin like "Sterling” on silver. feAYgm

“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.” marked with the safety “Bayer Cross,” can be taken without fear because you are getting the true, world-famous Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for over 18 years. Always buy an unbroken package of “Baser Tablets of Aspirin’’ whicti con-j

J. C. Hutzoll* R. P. DRUGGIST

Both Have Grown Since. In 1701 the population of China was what that of the United States is today. For your daughter’s sake, use Red Cross Ball Blue in the laundry. She will then have that dainty, well-groom-ed appearance that girls admire. sc. Not So Well. “I understand your wife treats you like a dog.” “Oh, no! She pets and feeds the dog.”

tains proper directions to safely relieve Colds, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Joint Pains, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of Salicglicacid.