Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 47, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 October 1925 — Page 2
Walkerton Independent ” Published Every Thursday by THE IND KPEN DEN T- NEWS CO. ' Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS LAKEVILLE STANDARD THE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES ‘ Clsm DeCoudres, Business Manager Ch axles M. Finch. Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year Six Months »« Three Months -60 TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton. lad.. as_second^c[*M_mstt.r^___^_^___ 3 The straight and narrow path is plenty wide for its traffic. The more dishwater a wedding ring sees the longer it seems to last. A jazz band is a comfort on the radio. You can’t tell which part is static. Paris is talking about the return of the bustle. May it get no further than talk. It may be ***aglc to lose one’s memory, out most of us would like to lose part of it. Egotism Is the anesthesia that keeps seme people on living terms with themselves. The man who hides behind a woman’s skirt is less a coward than a contortionist. What a wonderful race <urs will be when the baggy-pants boys grow up to their clothes. Britannia may or not rule the waves, but she has the say-so when it comes to rubber. The effort to exterminate our wild life seems easy for everybody except the grand jury. Literary item: A “tramp poet” has just published a volume of verse, which is also foot-loose. An English literature teacher has decided that slang is proper whenever it is not improper. Fish always seem to be biting best Id the lake where the other fellow went to spend his vacation. Blueberries and cantaloupes may have the call, but meantime what a crop of prunes is ripening. Another reason why love is a pretty good thing is that if you love a person you are not very ipt to kill or rob him. America: A nation which produced the song, “Home, Sweet Home,** and the query, “Where do we go from here?" Another self-evident fact is that the young men who complain that they can’t find a kick in life try everything except work. Here’s an item that says savagos have the keenest eyesight, and another that African belles admire the gowrs In American movies. Uncle Sam now exports $1,200,000 worth of shoe polish annually. It is a lesson showing the possibilities In beginning at the foot. The dollar bills will live longer when they do an honest dollar’s worth of work. They shorten their lives by their 40-cent schedules. Crude rubber has advanced again, this time 4% cents, to the new high level of sl.lO. What are the poor to do now for new balloon tires? After returning from your vacation in the country the only solution to the problem of clean air In the big town seems to be to move the city to the country. This summer, like all other sumaners. is the most remarkable summer we have aver experienced. The minimum of anxiety is what a pedestrian feels about the possible exhaustion of the petroleum supply. The German discovery that earthworms can sing explains everything. That’s what makes the fish want to eat ’em alive. The first great discovery made by the newly married man is the opener, in Its domestic sense. Is a device for taking off the tops of cans, not Jacks or better. Men are going In more for loud color schemes In clothes, having decided that if a man wishes to look like a cross between an Italian sunset and the rainbow It's his own funeral. If children are permitted to do as they pleas and to go where they please, they will be playing in the Bahd pile of the devil’s back yard before mother has played three hands of the bridge game. Massachusetts boy hikes 117 miles to join the army and is rejected on account of flat feet. The next time, he’ll know enough to catch a ride. More than 2.000,000 automobile 3 were made in this country in the first six months of 1925 and still some persons wonder at the traffic congestion. "1 guess you win,” said Noah as he ' threw down his cards; “the best I’ve got is two of a kind.” “Have your own way." observed She , “but it looks to me like a full house.” The hunter who stops by the butcher Ehop on his way from an unsuccessful «day afield Is a practical example of (the dead-game sport. The way Is being paved for a successor to the once-famous speaker who attracted attention with the address. “The Sun Do Move.” There was a time when a woman was quite proud to possess one silk dress. Os course she should have been proud; there was quite a lot of sl’k in IL
Hoosier News Briefly Told The annual reunion of the One Hundred and Thirtieth Indiana regiment in the Civil war was held at Anderson. A. E. Kress of Terre Haute, was 1 elected Indiana district governor of 1 the Indiana Klwanis clubs at the eighth annual convention, which was held at Fort Wayne. Gov. Ed Jackson, in company with Mrs. Jackson and several friends, attended the Wayne county fair. The governor displayed his horsemanship by riding at the head of a procession of saddle horses. To test the right of druggists under Indiana’s bone-dry law to sell Jamaica ginger for beverage purposes, B. O. Renbarger, Grant county sheriff, closed the Ticen drug store at Marion by court injunction. Indianapolis will be hostess city for the annual state convention of the Indiana League of Women Voters next year. It was announced at the business session of the board of directors of the league at Indianapolis. State conservation officials at Indianapolis announced the opening of the water fowl season September Id. The lawful shooting season remains open on quail until December 1 and on wild duck, wild geese and brant until January 1. Appointment of Robert H. Mclntyre, president of the Central Trust and Savings company of Newcastle, as a member of the board of trustees of the Eastern Indiana Hospital for the Insane, at Richmond, was announced at Indianapolis by Gov. Ed Jackson. All students in Indiana university at Bloomington who have automobiles and wish to keep them while In school, first must get permission to do so from the students’ affairs committee. Violation of this rule was the cause of several dismissals from the university last year. Financiers who attended the annual convention of the Indiana Bankers' association at West Baden, went on record as favoring repeal of the federal estate tax and as being against parole of any criminal. R. C. Stephenson of South Bend was elected president of the association. Boys and girls in dairy calf clubs of twenty states will come to Indianapolis October 10 to 17 to compete in a cattle-judging contest, one of the principal events of the 1925 National Dairy exposition, which will occupy eight of the large buildings on the state fair ground. The state board of pardons will meet bimonthly in the. future instead of every month, as has been the custom In the last few years, says an Indianapolis dispatch. The board members believe that the less frequented , meetings of the body will have a tendency to discourage short-time prisoners for appealing for clemency. “To live under the American Constitution is the greatest privilege that has ever been accorded to the human race," said Judge Robert C. Baitsell of the United States District court at Indianapolis, In speaking at the special exercises held in the main corridor of the city hall in commemoration of the adoption of the nation's basic law on September 17, 1787. The body of Robert E. Mansfield, 1 age fifty-nine, former Indiana newspaper man and writer, who spent , nearly twenty years in the United । States consular service, was taken to his home at Rushville, where funeral , services and burial took place. Mr. Mansfield died at the Methodist hos- , pltal in Indianapolis. In 1897 he 1 served as secretary of the Republican state central committee. । Seven members of the state motor 1 police will be dropped from the pay : roll beginning October 1, as the first < cut to be made by the department this I year because of the reduced approprla- < tion for maintenance of the force under the enactment of the budget law, ’ according to an announcement by Robert Humes, chief of the state police ; and authorized by Frederick Schortemeler, secretary of state. After eluding the authorities more than seventeen years in most every city of the United States, Monroe Mowery, age about fifty, wanted in connection with the killing of John Dove, his brother-in-law, a few miles south of Linton, 17 years ago, was taken into custody near the village of Antioch, a few miles south of Linton. Mowery has been living at Terre Haute under an assumed name. Mayors of Indiana towns along the Dixie highway and officials of the Hoosier State Highway Automobile association have made plans for a reception in Indianapolis and an escort through Indiana for Dixie highway motorcade from Chicago to Miami, Fla., which starts October 9 from Chicago in part celebration of the tenth anniversary of the establishment of good roads between the North and the jSouth. The grandstand at the Hoosier Motor Speedway, Pendleton pike and Thirty-eighth street, Indianapolis, was destroyed by fire, the loss being estimated at approximately $12,000. The origin of the fire is unknown. Taxpayers in Indiana contributed 538,446,429.25 toward the support of j the federal government in the fiscal ' year which ended June 30, says a i Washington dispatch. This was 16 per cent less than the contribution In the previous year, when the total tax collections In the state aggregated 545,767.607.75. Chemists of the state board of health are making laboratory tests of water in the Grand and Little Calumet rivers to determine what form of sewage is responsible for the contamination of the lake and streams in the Calumet region. The following Is a summary of weath- 1 er and crop conditions in Indiana by ' J. 11. Armington of the United States Department of Agt^cultur* at Indianapolis: The frequent rains with warm । weather benefited clovers, meadow«, pastures, tomatoes, late truck and other crops still growing. (
OOOOCXXXXXXXDOOOOOOOOOOOOOO HOW TO KEEP WELL —>— DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH” XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX) (©, 1925, Western Newspaper Union.) CHILDHOOD’S ENEMIES TTNDER this title Dr. Ada E. Schweitzer, director of the bureau of child welfare of the Indiana state board of health, discusses some of the health dangers of children in a recent number of the Indiana Health Bulletin. One of the greatest dangers of childhood as of adult life is the “common cold.” Coids are found everywhere, in all ages and classes, tn all climates and locations. Investigations by the I'nited States public health service show that they are by far the commonest ami most universal of all diseases. While not dangerous themselves to life, they are the starting point for many serious and chronic conditions. Babies with frequent or constant colds, who are always snuflHng, wheezing and coughing, soon develop an unnatural condition of the delicate membrane lining of the throat and nose. The swollen and inflamed membrane In the nose causes not only a constant secretion and discharge of Irritating mucus which keeps the nose plugged up and prevents normal breathing, but In time the membrane Itself becomes thickened, closing up the nasal canal so that the child becomes an habitual mouth breather. Sleeping and waking. the child breathes through Its mouth instead of through its nose Now the mouth was never intended to breathe through. When the air goes through the nose, as it should, I’ is warmed, strained and moistened and so reaches the throat and lungs warmed, moistened and strained, fret* from dust and other Irritating matter But when the air is drawn in through the open mouth it is cold, dry and full of dust. Continual mouth breathing keeps the throat dry and constant!” Irritate)!. Most children who nre mouth breathers have constant at tacks of bronchitis, dry, hacking 1 coughs and difficulty In breathing. As a result, the lungs are not properly filled, the child lacks sufficient oxygen nnd soon becomes round-shouldere , fiat-chested ant! anemic. Adenoids and infected tonsils are much more apt to develop in such children than In the normal child. The child with constant colds Is I more apt to have pneumonia and tn berculosls. Even If It lives to grow j up It is handicapper!. Protect the child from Infections. If it is a chronic mouth-breather, find out why and have the bad habit cor- j rected. WHY WE GROW XT THAT makes us grow? And. on V V the other hard, what makes us । stop growing? The process of growing is a natural one and the fact that we stop growing on arriving nt full growth or maturity is also natural. But what determines the size to which we grow and what stops us when we reach a certain size? Every form of animal life, except the very lowest asd simplest, aiqs ars first ' much smaller than full size and grows to its permanent form. The baby human and the baby elephant, the kitten ; and the puppy are born small ami undeveloped. They grow slowly or rapidly. the higher and longer lived forms slowly and the lower nnd simpler forms rapidly. The human baby needs twenty or twenty-five years for growth. The span of human life today averages fifty-nine years ami rarely exceeds one hundred. The baby elephant needs forty years to develop his huge body but lives to be two or three hundred years old. Why do our fingers ami toes nil i grow to be the same proportionate : size? Why doesn't one finger get I ahead of the rest or keep on growing ■ after the others have stopped? Why ■ do some men stop growing at five feet ■ and eight indies and others grow to six feet and four indies? What is our j real age? Is it the number of years | we have lived or the degree of growth ■ we have reached? These questions have so far had but ; one answer. Growth of the body begins, goes on and stops, because it is “natural.” Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller institute has been trying to find whygrowth begins and why it stops. Twelve years ago, he put a bit of the heart muscle of an unhatched chick in a test tube and, by keeping it at a fixed temperature and feeding it with chicken blood serum, he has kept it not only alive but growing ever since. Doctor Carrel has found by many experiments that the white blood corpuscles and the glands produce certain substances which he calls feeders. This substance stimulates growth. If it is plentiful, the individual grows large; if scanty, he grows little. If it is absent, he doesn’t grow at all. The younger the cells, the greater the amount of this substance produced. As the cells grow- older, this decreases in amount. Another substance in the serum has just the opposite effect, it checks growth. There is little of It in the baby and much of it in the blood of the old man. So young serum stimulates growth and old serum prevents it. <©. 1925. Western Newspaper Union.) The World Over Six hundred people were killed tn tornadoes that swept the Southern states in 1884. Rock plants are covered by stellate hairs that protect them from sun, damp or cold. To cover the interior surface of the steamer Leviathan, 41,000 gallons of paint was required. In Hamburg one has to buy an extra ticket if carrying a suitcase or other hand baggage on a street car.
SICK WOMEN SHOULD BE ENCOURAGED Letters Like This Prove the Reliability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Turtle Lake, Wisconsin. — “I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound tor weakness, backache and nervousness. I had these troubles . for years and had taken other medicines for them, but I have found no medicine so good as the Vegetable Compound and I recommend it to my friends who have troubles similar to mine. I saw it ad-
vertised and thought I would try it and it has helped me tn all my troubles. ’' I have had six children ana I have taken the Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound before each one was born, for weakness, vomiting, poor appetite and backache, and again after childbirth because of dizzy headaches. It is a good medicine for it always helps me. I nave also taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills for the last eight years for cod Btipation.”— Mrs. Mabel LaPoint, R. F. D. No. 1, Turtle Lake, Wisconsin. In a recent canvass, 98 out of every 100 women sav they were benefited by taking Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Conqiound. Teach Children ToL’se £ > Cuticura K < Soothes end Heal* "TL- ’ Rashes and Irritations 4 * Cuticura Soap Keep* the Skin Clear ■M rrow iht •table It, adde vigor to Iva and iritm, ha app«’•a Sick and Btl11. d fir over Chipsoff 6>e Old Block N? JUNIOBB-LHtl. We One-third the regular doee. Made of seme ingredients, then candy Coated. For children and adults. * ■ms SOLD BY YOUR DRUGGISYmm How It May Have Happened “Unit, there! I>ud-blast you. Imlt I” yelled Constable Sum T. Shickputter. the faithful gimrdian of the pence nnd dignity of Petunia, “what the Snm Hill d’ye menu, rushing through the main street of our progressive little | city like forty flogs after a cat?” “I didn't notice it, und—” returned I the offending motorist. •'Didn't notice It?" “No. I've got buy fever, nnd must ■ have passed along Main street while I was sneezing.”—Kansas Cltv Star. Sure Relief IHDIGtSJIONj CSKiWy 6 Bell-ans > Hot wafer Sure Relief DELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION 25<t and 75c Pkgs.Sold Everywhere Many English Prisons Sold More than twenty prisons In England have been entirely closed since 1914 nnd the 40 remaining In use are only partly filled at any time. The total prison population today in EngI land is less than 00,000 against 167,000 ten years ago. Prisons that are no longer needed are being sold by the prison commission. Farmers never yawn for want of something to do. ALL RUN DOWN, ROW HEALTHY “Honestly, in all my 15 years of experience as a nurse I have never known Os a medicine that compares with Tanlac,” is the glowing tribute of Nurse M. E. Chappelle. “Time and again I have recommended Tanlac and always with surprising results. Some time ago my Mother complained of being generally run down and on the verge of a nervous breakdown. She had no appetite, her stomach was disordered, digestion weakened and her bowels were most irregular. “Tanlac came to her aid at once, brought on a vigorous appetite so that she began to eat with the greatest relish, and made the digestive organs function properly once more. In a short time she was well, happy and strong, and although over 80 years of age she is now vigorous enough to look after her household duties and go out quite a little, too. This is why I praise Tanlac and consider it the best ton io and health builder ever discovered.” What Tanlac has done for others it can also do for you. Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 million bottles sold. Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills for constipation. Made ana recommended by ths manufacturers of Tanlac. TANLAC FOR YOUR HEALTH x Green’s August Flower ! I ^ or Constipation, I indigestion and \ Torpid Liver \ / Successful for 59 yean. Xrw/I \ m*»v Bo c and 90c bottles— ALL DRUGGISTS
fIfPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday School » Lesson ’ (■y REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D.D , D«a» of the Evening School. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (©. 1925. WvK'ern Newspaper Union.) Lesson for October 4 PAUL IN ATHENS LESSON TEXT—Acts 17:18-84. GOLDEN TEXT—“For In Him w* !!▼•, and move, and have our being.”—Acts 17:28. PRIMARY TOPIC —Paul Tells thn People About God. JUNIOR TOPIC —Paul Preaches on Mars’ Hill. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—God the Father of All Mankind. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPi IC—True and False Ideas of God. I. The Idolatry of the Athenians (▼. 16). Athens was the Intellectual metropolis of the world at that time, the home of the world’s greatest eloquence and philosophy. Paul's spirit was stirred within him when he saw the city wholly given to Idolatry. 11. Paul Disputing With the Athenians (vv. 17-21). 1. In the Synagogue (▼. 17a). True to his usual custom, he went Into the Jewish synagogue and entered Into earnest argument with the Jews and devout persons. 2. In the Market Place (vv. I7b-21). From the Jews lie turmsl to such as were found in the market place. Here he came Into touch with the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers. The former were atheistic materialists. They denied the doctrine of creation, and gave themselves up to sensual indulgences since they rehs’ted the hies of a future judgment. The latter were pantheists. When they heard the preaching of Pau! they desired to know what new doctrine lie preached, so they Invited him to the Areopagus where he might speak to them of his new doctrine. They Inquired as to what this “babbler” might say. Since the Athenians spent their whole time either In telling or bearing some new tiling, they were willing to listen to Paul. The word, “babbler" means literally, “seed picker." They conceived Paul to be a globe-trotter who had gathered up seeds of truth here and there over the world, and that he was somewhat like themselves, interested In talking about that which he knew. 111. Paul’s Address on Mars* Hill (vv. 22 31). 1. The Introduction (vv. 22 23). He did not accuse them of superstition. but as In the Revised Version, he Introduces his discourse in a courteous and conciliatory manner. Mating that he perceived that they were very religious. This he explains by saying that as he was viewing their city he beheld an altar with an Inscription to the unknown go*!. This whs his point of contact. He proceeded at once to connect It with the Idea of ttie living God. Implying thHt this altar had been erected to Hiro. 2. The Body of His Discourse (vv. 24-31). (1) A Declaration Concerning God (v. 24 25). a He created the material universe (v. 24). This was a direct blow at the philosophy of both the Epicureans and the Stoics. He did not attempt to prove the existence of God. it needs no proof. The Bible everywhere assumes the existence of a Divine Be- । ing. b. His Spirituality and Immensity : (vv. 24-25). He Is not worshiped with mens hands as though He needs anything, neitiier is He confined by any sort of a religious temple. Being essentially spiritual. He demands heart service, and being transcendent, above all. He is not confined to earthly temples. c. His Active Providence (v. 25). He gives existence, bestows needed 1 gifts, and as sovereign, directs all i things. (2) A Declaration Concerning Man (vv. 26-31). a. This was a blow at the foolish 1 Athenian pride which supposed that j they were superior to all other people. ; This proposition he proved from their ! own literature (v. 28). If men are ; the offspring of God. and bear His I likeness, it is utter folly to make Images as the senseless Idols were. b. Nations have their place by the j soverign purpose of God (v. 26). c. Men Should Seek God (v. 27). His goodness and grace In supplying all our needs, and ordering that even the affairs of the nations should move men to see and seek God. d. The Pressing Obligation to ReI pent (vv. 30-31). This was his supreme message. Though God had formerly passed over Idolatry, He now calls to all men to repent. The solemn reason for such action Is the coming day of judgment, the credential of which is the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. IV Results of Paul’s Preaching (vv. 32-34). 1. Some Mocked (v. 32). This is even the case today. Men and women will mock the preacher who preaches a judgment to come. 2. Some Procrastinated (v. 32). Many do not mock, but they hesitate to accept and act upon the urgency of the message. 3. Some Believed (v. 34). Wherever the gospel is preached there are some who believe and are saved. Sufficient for the Day Do not look forward to what might happen tomorrow; the same everlasting Father who cares for you today will take care of you tomorrow, and every day. Either He will shield you from suffering, or He will give you unfailing strength to bear it. Be at peace then, and put aside all anxious thoughts and imaginations.—St. Fran- ' cis de Sales. ' Give Him Your Hand Christ seeketh your help in your place; give Him your hand. —KutherI ford.
Foreign-Born Farmers Comparatively few of the foreignborn In the United States make their living from the soil. In many cities foreigners predominate, but the land Is tilled by about 5,000,000 native white farmers ns compared with about 600,(MM) foreign born white farmers. Colored farmers outnumber foreignborn farmers two to one. The largest proportion of foreign-born farmers is | in California, the figures being 75,000 ; to 35,000 non-native. Other states | that have the most foreign-born on the soli are Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, South Dakota and Washington. New York farms are operated by 25,000 foreign-born and 165,000 native farmers. Throughout the country there are 7,000 Japanese and 600 Chinese farmers. No Weakness There "Is your baby strong?” "Well, he seems able to lift his voice many times a day.” To bring Greek firms in closer relations with domestic and foreign sellers an International fair will be held in Salonlki.
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Logical Maid Up—You're tile sweetest girl I ever saw. She —Sweetness can't be seen. A Substantial REWARD Thovsands t people tn America have been liberally rewarded for insisting on I ' having USKIDE Soles on tneir shoes. 1 USKII>E wears and wears and wears. It is made only by the United States 1 Rubber Company, the world's largest manufacturer of rubber products. The money It saves on shoe bills is remarki able. Have y.>ur old shoes re-bottomed with USKIDE. Buy new shoes with genuine USKIDE Soles. USKIDE is ! comfortable. healthful, waterproof, good-looking Protects against slipping Ix»ok for the name USKIDE on the sole.—Adv. How He Knew "How d<> you tell the twins apart?” "One of ’em don't like ki.-sing.” Watch Cuticura improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. ; Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful what Cuticura will do i for poor complexions, dandruff. Itching and red, rough hands. —Advertisement. ! Many people have a lot of good in I > them, but, unfortunately, they keep it . there. Aspirin i Say “Bayer Aspirin’" i INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by ■ , millions and prescribed by phy- “ sicians for 24 years. O Accept only a Bayer package which contains proven directions . ’ Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets , i Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists > ; Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Mana--1 facture of Monoacetlcacidester of Sa-lcylicacld m ERUPTIONS ly and annoying • • in> proved by one application of Resinol ' &ouNeed~£s^ f S It tends to promote good health, strengthen ■ 1 the digestive organs and to keep the stomach B J ■ in good condition. At All DruacisU, ? 1 XUS HOBTKTTKB CO., PITISBUEGH. PA. I ^Jo build yotyip • rhirtyßunningSores Remember, I stand back of every box. 1 Every druggist guarantees to refund 1 the purchase price (60 cents) if Peterson's Ointment doesn't do all I claim. 1 I guarantee it for eczema, old sores, : 8 running sores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore nipples, broken breasts, itching skin, • skin diseases, blind, bleeding and itch- ; ing piles, as well as for chafing, burns, scalds, cuts, bruises and sunburns. “I had 30 running sores on my leg for 11 years, was in three different | hospitals. Amputation was advised, r Skin grafting was tried. I was cured by using Peterson’s Ointment.” —Mrs. F. E Root, 287 Michigan Street, Buffalo. N. T. I
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Hungarian Wheat American wheat cannot compete with Hungarian wheat In Vienna, for the Hungarian wheat is now on an export basis and sells at prices below the world level.—Science Service. I | CC>OOA. i U • Experience of more than 70 I I years leads us to believe that ; it is impossible to produce i a finer Cocoa than Monarch. ^^ ****** for years Our Monarch Quality W Foods are not sold v by chain stores. t Reid, Murdoch Co. Chicago, U. S. A. wXL BmUi , H U»bar*h, S«w Y Kremcla the wonderful face bleach makes the skin beautiful. At all drug and dept, stores or by mail $1.25. Booklet free. Dr. C. H. Berry Co.. 2975 S. Michigan Ave, Chicago PARKER’S hair balsam Removes Dandruff-Stop, Hair Falling Restores Color and -MBS Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair SOc and lI.W at Druggists. Hiseox Chern Wks , Patcbogue.N.T, HINDERCORNS Removes Coma. Callouses. etc, stops all pain, ensures comfort to tba feet, make, walking easy. 15c by mall or st Druggists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, KT. ^■FREEi'^l ’-■U Write today and tot us tell I 7°u ail about our new ■ »SS atartlfng publinty ram- ■ Ksi palfn—Row we are 9 BMHjBtTaJEBpBS to advertise the LX>U-AH ■ v ''irWgg HITJ. STORE- byOTVtNO ■ beautiful drrse*s ■ ho^e. dainty • n da r- ■ r* rTOen * > - to W'ltnen— ■ F R complete outfits of wtarlns gE ■ appare! to boys and fir la— ■ aL’ without a wont of e^ot H *• SS3 eon-ent —no <?ar.vaa«i^f ■ — nc obUrationa to bee ■ Th s o'*er la npe«. ?• •»«r^ ■ PUggfcS i woman, bo? and clr I. '• I Pon t d»*ar—Write tMay ■ DOLLAR BILL STORE* 8 »M 0 w. Narth Ava. ■ Ch tease 111 Grace Hotel CHICAGO T - Jackson Blvd, and Clark Bt, 2 X Rooms with detached bath I'. M ej and 12 00 per day: with privat. WEgilglbir. IF ® bath 12 JO and |2 50. O,sx»l« Pal e Office— Sear 10 Tkeatr*, u. Stere,. Stock yards cars direct to door. - A clean, comfortable, newly *» I’T’LWjl decorated hotel. A safe place PrSarTi i 'nFai < or your wife, mother or sister DISCOVERED! ■_ 'S''MMatSWM T he camera that takes and de- ; a- velops good pictures on cards Ig-A- x 2 In. In 2 minutes. You do 1t HL'™- a ‘l yourself. Anyone can do it tVjjH Wonderful results. The sensatiou of the day. Order now. Pay 1 y, 1 Postman 42 15 for camera and supplies ready to take pictures iI^SSSRSU soon as received. 6 extra cards w-SJit—f re e jf money Is sent with order or 10c m stamps for circular and sample picture. BURNHAM SACHS CO, Dept. K, Bast Orange. N. X Hr. L. Duncan's Marvelous Treatment re- ; lieves cause of diseases from >he body Not a failure in 20 years’ practice. No medicine. . 211 High Ave, Cleveland. O. Enclose stamp. । Piles Believed by Painless Treatment —No i operation—no electricity—life guarantee—- ' testimonials on request. Write Specialist, I Room 40^-530 Grand Ave, Milwaukee. Wla | Start a Mail Order Business of Your Own. 53 successful money-making enterprises, all ! sent prepaid for only sl. Add Consolidated ! Art Studios. Box 5089. Kansas City, Mo. GET RID OF YOUK FAT | Reduce with PHYSICAL CULTURE OBESITY SOAP, honestly medicated. Money- ' back guarantee. Send $1 for 3-cake box. i Columbia Laboratories. 1S Columbia Heights. Brooklyn. N. Y Medicated Soap Specialists. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 39 -1925
