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>1;' The next time you buy calomel ask for 4 'ItT- 1 * The purified and refined calomel tablets that are nauseatapt safe and sure. Medicinal virtues retain ed and improved* Sold only in sealed paclcages. Price 35c. A FARMER carrying express package rrc a big mail-order house was accosted by a local dealer. "Wfar didn’t you buy that bill qf foods from me? / coaid haoo saved you the express, and besides you would have been pattonMnf a home store, which helps pay the taxes and builds up this locality. ” The farmer looked at the HMf> chant« moment and then said: “Why don’t you patronise year heme paper assdadvertise? / read it and didn't knew thatyou hod thestgf I have hero ** MORAL—ADVERTISE life Was a Misery Mrs. F. M. Jones, ot Palmer, OkUu, writes: "From the time 1 en tered into womanhood „ . . I looked with dread from one month to the next 1 suffered with my back and bearing-down *pain, until liflS to mf was a misery. I would think I could not endure the pain any longer, and I gradually got worse. . . Nothing seemed to help me until, one day, . • ,« 1 decided to TAKE “ l took four bottles,” Mrs. Jones goes on to $ay, "and was. not only greatly relieved, but can truthfully say that I have not a pain. . . " it has now been two years since I tookCardui, and 1 am still in good health. . . 1 would ad vise any woman or girl to use Carflui who. is & sufferer from any female trouble.”' If you suffer pain caused from womanly trouble, or if you feel the need of a good strengthening tonic to build up your run-rdown system, take the advice of Mrs. Jones. TryCar- dui. It helped her. We believe it will help you. AD Druggists J.M DRQU-THS- AN’P -f»E6T8~W—MUCH OF' THE GREAT PRODUCING AREAS CAUSED DECLINE. / WHEAT LOSS IS TREMENDOUS Crops of Corn, Oats, Barley and Po tatoes Also Show an Appreciable ~ Lots in AlmostVEvery Section. The Woman’s Tonic Washington. — With living costs soaring, the nation’s principal food crops showed sharp decreases during [ July, resulting from drouths and pests over much of the growing area. Wheat production fell off 221,000*- 000 bushels during the month, accord ing to the telecast of the department | of agriculture; corn showed a redUc- \ CHICHESTERS.PIU-8 000,000 bushels; barley 27,000,000 bushels and white potatoes 34,000,000 bushels. Rice alone of all the crops showed an increase. Total production of wheat was fore cast at 940,000,000 bushels, but this was an increase oj, 23,000,000 bushels over the forecast last December 1 and 149,000,000 bushels over the five-year average from 1913 to 1918. Winter CtttEP—JUSTICE QP—BUBBEMI COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA E. B. GA Ol’TO'MKTRI UmC*! .UbtKH! 5!Jit CHAIRMAN CONFERENCE. sis IS wsirat SOLUM American People Are Aeked to Weigh Carefully and Without ’ Prejudice All Phaaea of Plumb Plan. Washington.—A national conference to consider all plans submitted to Congress for solution o{ the railroad problem will be held here‘October 6, under auspices of the Plumb organiza tion bureau. •. - — In making public announcement of the meeting, C^hie^ Justice Walter Clark, of the North Carolina supreme Han* "of 27-9^0,OQft^-bushela^. oata.. 137^ ^eourtrend etoimawsef therPiamb plan wheat showed the greatest losJ with 124,000,000 bushels, with spring wheat production showing a decline of 97,- 000,000 bushels. PLUM1B CALMLY TALKS OF A REVOLUTION A8 ALTERNATIVE Washington.—All day long frontf, a witness chair before the houge inter state commercd committee. Glenn E. Plumb, counsel for the railroad broth erhoods and author of organized la bor’s plan for tri-partite control of the railroads, responded to sharp ques tioning from the semi-circle of com mittee memberi who called on him to explain every phase of the labor bill. Gravely, Plumb talked of revolu- [ tlon as an alternative in case the adop tion of “some such plan” was not ob tained by political action through Congress, and said that was the de termination of the masses of men whom he represented, “though I hope [never to live to see the* day.” The incusiig of the Plumb plah league, organized to forward the la bor bill’s passage, he said, was “1 the neighborhood o^ $100,000 or $125 000 smn^ally now,” though only or ganized in July. ' t COMMITTEE OF CONGRESS WILL PROBE INTO MEXICAN MATTER. Waslngton.—Blanket authority to bring out all *tbe facts about Mexican outrages on Americans and American property, and to formulate a remedial program, was given to the foreign re lations committee bv the senate. Withltt debate and by unanimous vote a resolution directing the inquiry was adopted after its provisions had been stiffened in committee so as to make subject to Investigation “any and all acts of the governments of Mexico and its citizens in derogation of the rights of the United States or of its citizens.” preliminary conference, said special committees would be appointed to an alyze the different proposals. The American people were urged by Judge Clark to consider all the propo sals “without prejudice and without passion, and to examine those which have been optliiied in the light of the principles which we have enunciated.” Declaring that efficiency and econ omy in transportation are the keys to the solution of the problem of the high cost of living, Judge Clark added that any plan for solution of the railroad problem “must meet the test that it will provide transportation at actual cost.” THIRTY YEARS EXPERIENCE IN FITTING GLASSES 'Sr.’ tCTlS.'SO v. .v. 1:50 i*. m. to C r. m Office Commercial Bank' Building A Man and tha World. The worid owes you nothing, unless by your own achievements you hava made It your debtor. The man who Imagines that the world owes him a living has taken the first step toward knavery; the second step is taken when he tries to collect the debt which la not due him. The greater his sue* oess In this, the greater thief he is, if ha takes out of the world more thafc ha has put Into it—Lyman Abbott A Mammoth Reconstruction Proj ectl ■miiiiim iiruriiiiiiiiiiii iwhiiiiiii uni iimniiim iiwir 111 iiiiiii WAT^T, ™CCTT>Tn A VTTA V, T! C <- A T, I I MADE POSSIBLE —AND NECESSARY—BY ADVERTISING DONT FORGET OS When you need any thing in 'the Hne o! neat and' attractive Printing. .r-dmcpis; t V ’LTJCLIY CHZ. w*£:G CUM FACTQRY. CHICAGO T ] : iHE already tremendous cKov.nr', fcun f-ctory cf tlia Wnt. Wriilcy Jr. Company, at 35th Street and Ashland Avtnue, Chicago, is to be' doubled in size. The first ) lar&e unit of the new structure i.; now under construction. When completed,tha new plant will comprise a million and a quarter square loot of space, devoted entirely to the manufacture of chewing £um. Tho area covered is six hundred by three hundred ‘feet, the building bein& ei*ht stories hi&h with v a3ement. It is of heavy ro-inforced concrete and steel, white terra-cotta exterior. Track facilities for loading fifty cars at one time are provided. Special iaaturos are a modern roof-garden, recreation hall, restaurant, hospital, welfare department, library, club rooms, sracking, room, hand-ball court*, gymnasium and showers. S. Scott Joy, jlrdutert, L. S7. Sproul Co., General Contractors. ssst o The Kid Knows! Does your nickel buy yoi$ coolness, pleasure and insurance against heat in this weather ? Are you burdened with, the sizzling air ? Cheer up! There's relief in sight! The cool wave of Pepsi-Cola will make Old Man Humidity look like a frosty morning in Iceland t In hot weather it is simply priceless! 11 makes you fairly scintillate! Drink ' Pepifying—Satisfying—Stimulating PEPSI-COLA — WAR DEPARTMENT ISSUES PRICE LIST OF SUPPLIES. Wasington.—The war department made public a complete price list on all subsistence stores available for sale to the public through the parcels post or through municipal selling agencies. Costs of the commodities to the government, the department said, had been disregarded entirely in fix ing the prices of sale which are ma terially lower than prevailing market rates. The prices quoted are f. o. b. and from storage points in each of the 13 districts into which the country is di vided for war department subsistence purposes. The department now is re distributing the/food supplies in the 13 areas in order that each may have its proportion per population of the 72 articles offered for public sale. SOLUTION OF THRACIAN PROBLEM IS REACHED. Paris.—The peace conference reach ed a solution of the Thracian problem according to The Intransigeant, by dividing Thrace, some going to Greece and others being designated to form ! the future frete state state of Constan- ! tinople and a new free state under the league of nations. The solution arrived at, according to The Intransigeant, provides for divid ing Thrace into eastern and western I Thrace. •• ’ I STRIKING CHICAGO SHOPMEN RETURNING TO THEIR JOBS. Chicago.—A break came in the strike of railway shopmen when several thousand strikers returned to work in response. to President, Wilson's re quest and the appeal of international representatives of the six crafts in volved. Directoi 1 R.,H. Aishton.iof the northwestern region, ind Hale Holden, of the chiral western roads, said there was much encouragement In the siti- aUon. ... — V Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company P. &JEANS, Owner • \