The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, January 03, 1919, Page THREE, Image 3
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4.
j'
For headache, |!
- neuralgia, colds and j
ormne nrudent dKv
o* -ri? k ?- * ~ ji
sicians now advise j
! ?
^?r i;
\ jc
The improved tablet in
which the heart-depressing J
tendency is counteracted t
by heart-toning elements. a
To avoid confusion Aspitone i c
is sold only in unbroken jt
packages* Price 35c At h
P. E. WAT, DRUGGIST.
GILD EE & WEEKS CO. j
FAREWELL DINNER ii
TO HONOR WILSON *
i
I
King George Entertains for American
President?No Speeches Made. f
I
? ? j
London, Dec. 30 (By the Associated.^
Press.)?The farewell dinner given in ;
the state dining room at Buckingham!
Palace tonight by King George and c
Queen Mary in honor of President c
Wilson and Mrs. Wilson was a pri- 1
c
vate function. There was no procession
into the dining room, which was
decorated with yellow, and there were
no speeches or toasts. The Grenadier.c
Cruards Band played during the dinner,
hut no national anthems were ?
rendered. Those who sat down to a
dinner were the king and queen, Pres- ^
Ident and Mrs. Wilson, Princess Mary,! ^
Prince Henry, Prince George, the *
Duke of Connaught, John W. Davis, 1
the American ambassador, the Duke
and Duchess of Abercorn, Lord and t
Lady Cavendish, Viscount and Vis- t
countess Abcescon, Viscount Astor,;
Admiral Sir Stanley Colville and <(
Lady Colville, Sir Ronald Graham and |
Lady Graham, Miss Edith Benham, t
Mrs. Wilson's secretary, Rear Admir- t
al Grayson, U. S. N.; Brig. Gen. Wil- c
liam H. Hart, U. S. A.; the Duchess
of Sutherland, the Dowager Countess t
of Airle, Viscount Farquarhar, lord r
steward to the king, and Lord Stam- ^
ford Ham, private secretary to the f
Tfing- ig
President Wilson and Mrs. Wilson ?
. a
will* leave Buckingham Palace Tues- ^
-day morning at 9 o'clock on the first t
stage of their return journey to
.France. In the procession to the Vicoi-i'
? ??t -i.i. i._ J...? i
lona oiatiuu seiux-tsutie uuiuaus win
be used. King George and President ^
Wilson will occupy the first: Queen
Mary, Mrs. Wilson and the Princess
Mary the second, and members of the a
president's party and court officials B
the third, fourth and fifth. No troops t
will be stationed along the streets q
but the party will have a guard of t
honor to the station. Sir Charles
Cust, the king's equerry, will accompany
President Wilson to Calais. ^
The diners entered the dining hall,
in pairs, King George escorting Mrs.'_
^Wilson and President Wilson giving
Jiis arm to Queen Mary. The dinner v
was served on one long table. The *
king, with Mrs. Wilson on his right, *]
sat in the center on one side, while u
President Wilson with" *he queen be- s
side him, sat opposite the king. < *
The dining room is a handsome i]
apartment and contains many fine pictures
and art treasures. The table *
decorations were daffodils. Some of ^
the smaller pieces of the Windsor gold 5
plate were also used for decorative *
purposes. {c
Ater the dinner members of the v
_ _ ... . . o
royal Household who had not attended a
the function joined the party informally
in the drawing room. jr
President Wilson arrived in London =s
at 7:15 p. m. and immediately went to h
Buckingham Palace. He was cheered. c
by large numbers of persons whoj
were proceeding homeward from:
busines. Otherwise there was no 1
demonstration as the time of the ar- F
rival of the president's special train
was not known to the public. y
President Wilson will go direct to *
Italy from Paris. He will leave Paris J
for Rome Wednesday night,' arriving! 1
in the Italian capital Friday. Rome d
is to be the only city in Italy the presi- i
dent will visit. He expects to be away I
from Paris a week, returning there a | t
week from next Tuesday. j "v
While in Rome the president will be j ?
the guest of the Italian government, j c
It seems certain now that he will visit; a
Pope Benedict and also call at the c
Methodist college. By the time the c
president returns to Paris from Italy t
the Jontisn delegates to tee peace con-, c
ference will have arrived, it is under-! a
stood. The preliminary conferences! s
may then be in sight and the prelimi- j j
nary organization work of the Ameri-11
can peace mission will have been com- > f
pleted. . | ci
'GREAT TIDE OF BROTHERHOOD
?UNr'-NG IN HEARTS OF MEN,"
DECLARES WILSON TO GEORGE
London, Dec. 27.?Replying to the
-ir.-r'c qHHvc.cc at rhp ctarp hanniipf rr>
Light, President Wilson said:
"I am deeply complimented by the
gracious words which you have uttersd.
The welcome which you have giv>n
me and Mrs. Wilson has been so
'/arm, so natural, so evidently from
he heart, that we have been more
han pleased. We have been touched
>y it, and I believe that I consequenty
interpret that welcome as embodyng
not only your own generous spirit
oward us personally, but also as ex>ressing
for yours and the great naion
over which you preside that same
eeling for my people, for the people
>f the United States.
"For you and I, sir?I temporarily?
smbody the spirit of two great naions,
and whatever strength I have
md whatever authority, I posses it
>nly so long and so far as I express
he spirit and purpose of the American
>eople.
"Every influence that the American
>eople have over the affairs of the
world is measured by their sympathy
nth the aspirations of freemen everywhere.
All Leaders United.
"America does love freedom, and I
relieve that she loves freedom unselishly.
But if she does not, she will
lot and cannot help the influence to
which she justly aspires.
"I have had the privilege, sir, of
inferring with the leaders of your
>wn government and with the spokesnen
of the governments of France and
>f Italy, and I am glad to say that I
lave the same conceptions that they
iave of the significance and the scope
>f the duty on which we have met
"We have used great words; all of
is have used the great words 'right'
md 'justice,' and now we are to prove
whether or not we understand these
rords, and how they are to be applied
o the particular settlements which
I
nust conclude this war.
"And we must not only understand
hem, but we must have the courage
o act upon our understanding.
^ - * -*-? t 1 ? XX a J
iei, aner i nave uiierea uie wuiu
courage,' it comes into my mind that
t would take more courage to resist
he great moral tide now running in
he world than to yield to it, than to
>bey it.
"There is a great tidp running in
he hearts of men. The hearts of the
uen have never beaten so singularly
n unison before. Men have never beore
been so conscious of their brothrhood.
Men have never before resized
how little difference there was
between rigjtit and justic in one latiude
and in another, under one sovreignty
and under another.
Justice Controlling Force.
"And it will bp. our hizh nrivilesre I
relieve, sir, not only to apply the
aorai judgment of the world to the
articular settlements which we shall
ttempt, but also to organize the
aoral force of the world to preserve
hose settlements, to steady the forces
f mankind and to make the right and
he justice to which great nations like
ur own have devoted themselves, the
redominant and controlling force of
he world.
"There is something inspiring in
:nowing that this is the errand that
re have come on. Nothing less than |
his would have justified me in leav-1
ng the important tasks which fall j
pon me upon the other side of the |
ea?nothing but the consciousness
hat nothing else compares with this
a dignity and importance.
"Therefore, it is the more delightul
to find myself in the company of a
ody of men united in ideal and pur>ose
and to feel that 2 am privileged
o unite my thoughts with yours in
arrying forward these standards
rhich we are so proud to hold so high I
,nd to defend. |
"May I not, sir, with a feeling of
>rofound sincerity and friendship and
ympathy, propose your health and the
tealth of the queen and the prosperity
if Great Britain."
Address by King.
In his speech at the state banquet
o President Wilson at Buckingham
>alace tonight, King George said:
"This is an historic moment and
our coming marks an historic epoch,
nearly 150 years have passed since
our republic began its independent
ife and now, for the first time, a presilent
of the United States is our guest
n England.
"We welcome you to the country!
'."hence came your ancestors and I
rhere stand the homes of those from
rhom sprang Washington and Lin:oln.
We welcome you for yourself,
is one whose insight, calmness and
lignity in the discharge of his high
luties we have watched with admiraion.
We see in you the happy union
kf fVjo criffc of o anholor wifV> fV?aca Af
'* W4 u kJV/AlViUl IUVOC \JL ,
l studious, academic quiet into the full j
tream of an arduous public life and
rour deliverances have combined
>readth view and grasp of world
roblems with the mastery of a lofty
liction recalling that of your great
orators of the past and of our cwra.
Head of Mighty Nation.
! "You come as the official head and
; spokesman of a mighty commonwealth
i bound to us by the closest ties. Its
people speak the tongue af Shake
, speare and Milton. Our literature is
; yours, as ycurs is also ours, and men
of letters in both countries have joined
in maintaining its incomparable
glories.
"To you, not less than to us, belong
I the memories of our national heroes,
from King Albert down to the days of
Philip Sidney, and Drake, of Raleigh
and Blake and Hampden and the days
: when the political life of the English
stock in America was just beginning.
You share with us the traditions of
I
self-government as old as the magna
charta.
| "We recognize the bond of still
I deeper significance in the common
ideals which our neoDle cherish. First
among those ideals you value, and we
value, freedom and peace. Privileged
as we have been to be the exponents
and the examples in national life of
the principles of popular self-govern;
ment based upon equal laws, it now
falls to both of us alike to see how
these principles can be applied beyond
our own borders for the good of the
world.
1 "It was love of liberty, respect for
:law, good faith and the sacred rights
of humanity that brought you to the
old world to help in saving it from
the dangers that were threatening
around and that arraigned those sol
dier-citizens of yours, whose gallantry
we have admired, side by side, with
ours in the war.
New Task Ahead.
"You have now come to help in
building up new states amid the ruins
of those that the war has shattered
and in laying the solid foundations of
a settlement that ~*ay stand firm because
it will rest upon the consent of
the emancipated nationalities. You
have eloquently expressed the hope of
the American people, as it is our hope,
that some plan may be devised to attain
the end you have done so much to
promote by which the risk of future
wars may, if possible, be averted, relieving
the nations of the intolerable
burden which fear of war has laid upon
them.
"The British nation wishes all success
to the deliberations on which you
and we and the great free nations allied
with us are now to enter, moved
by disinterested good will and a sense
of duty commensurate with the power
which we hold as a solemn trust.
"The American and British people
have been brothers in arms and their
arms have been crowned with victory.
We th|ank, with all our hearts, your
valiant soldiers and sailors for their
splendid part in that victory, as we
thank the American people for their
noble response to the call of civiliza+
i/Mn nn/9 r\ r* r\
tivu auu uuuiauitj. xrxaj mu oauic
brotherly spirit inspire and guide our
united efforts to secure for the world
the blessing3 'of an ordered freedom
and an enduring peace.
"In asking you to join with me in
drinking the health of the president,
I wish to say with what pleasure we
welcome Mrs. Wilson to this country.
"I drink to the health of the president
of the United States and Mrs.
Wilson and to the happiness and prosperity
of the great American nation."
3IR. WILLIAM G. McADOO
I EXPRESSES HIS APPRECIATION
i
TREASURY 'DEPARTMENT
Washington.
November 21, 1918,.
My Dear Mr. Kinard:
The armies of freedom have won a
glorious victory and have brought
near the dawn of a new day for humanity.
i
Our army of loyal civilians has also
won its victories without which the
i nther vvrf-ories oni land and sea would
have been impossible. The succe3s of
j the fourth Liberty Loan campaign) is
I due chiefly to the unselfish work of
thousands of men and wome*,?I take
this opportunity of expressing to you
my deep appreciation: of your splendid
service to the country. Will you
please convey to the other members
of your committee my sincere thanks
We still have before us a great task
?the task of raising the additional
moneys required to meet the war expenses
already incurred, the returni ot
our victorious armies to American
soil, their demobilization and civil rehabilitation.
Until this work has been
done, our duty to our heroes and to
our country will not have been performed.
I am sure that I can count m
every loyal ard patriotic member of
the Liberty Loan Committee and the
War Savings Committees throughout
the country to continue their support
T! _ T~v ~ (ha
m me j.ie<t&ury i^eyttrtuicnt uuui
great work is completed.
Very sincerely yours,
W. G. McAdoo.
.Mr. John M. Kinard, Chairman,
Fourth Liberty Loan Com.
Xewberry, S. C.
BRITISH PLANE ?!
I HITS HUN BOATi
: I
Qtnm/ nf on AHonl/ hv Clv/crc nn
wivi j ui u'i mj i ijui ti wii
German Destroyer
Fleet.
; AHEMPTTO ESCAPE DANGER
i
! !
Enemy Ship Becomes a Twisted andi
Dirty Wreck After Bomb From i
, Above Strikes It?All in
the Day's Work.
London.?To the observer in the
' rear cockpit of the fast British bomb- ;
liif; mucmue uie sceue xiuruiy apyeureu ,
to change from minute to minute. The j
engine roared, the sunlight came slant-!
ing in onto his knees, a biting wfnd j
beat on his face, and below was the:
slightly hazy surface of the sea, while:
' to the right lay the dim line of the j
Belgian coast, which swept away to j
the wider silver reaches of the Scheldt I
estuary. Ahead of him two British i
machines flew in the same direction, j
I with their propellers seeming to re!
volve lazily, as they always do when j
: seen from another machine. The ob-.
server,continually scanned the air;
above and below the machine, and ex-1
, amined every now and then the sur-,
! face of the sea.
I Suddenly the front machine turned'
! to the right and began to fly toward1
| the coast. Its occupants had evidently
seen something of importance. Looking
below, the observer of the back;
machine saw a few miles from the
, Zeebrugge mole six little shapes which,
! seemed stationary on the gray sea.
German Destroyers.
! They were German destroyers which
! were in reality steaming at top speed
toward the coast. Gradually the airplanes
drew nearer and nearer and
soon were but a few miles from the
land.
Near the front machine appeared a:
small black ball of smoke. Another
I appeared, and another, and the ob|
server could hear the sharp crack of
j the bursting shells. A moment later
j the second machine entered the zone
of bursting shells, some leaving white
I smoke, and others leaving black or
j evil-looking yellow vapor. Along the
coast line he could see the little red
i flrshes of the anti-aircraft batteries,
j Nojp, however, they were almost over
; the destroyers, which were beginning
I to zigzag as the danger of the comi
ing attack was realized.
i
, The observer saw six black cylin)
ders drop spinning from the front ma1
chine, and then, with his two reins
| round the pilot's arms in front, he
; steered the machine to the right and
| left as he watched the destroyer
' nrlwAfl KoiHJ nf Vl i Q
! UJiUUgll llic nuco ouu uuio vi. u.u
' bomb sight Even as he was direct|
ing the machine he saw the great
white clouds of steam, smoke and waI
ter leap np from the sea near the dej
stroyer. I
[ The second destroyer, which was
now steering an almost direct conrse,
appeared below his range bars. He
turned the pilot slightly to the right
in order that he might allow for the
speed of the boat, and slowly pushed
over his bomb levers, one by one. Below
the wings he had a momentary
ellmDse of the yellow, fish-like bombs
rushing downward. He shouted to the
pilot, and they turned quickly away
from the inferno of shells which were
bursting all around them.
Scores Direct Hit
The observer stood up and watched
intently what was going on below.
Near the destroyers appeared the
white smoke and spray of a bomb.
Another followed, and another. Then
on one of the destroyers a great red
flash appeared and the center of the
boat was left clouded In smoke. He
had scored one direct hit. He shouted
excitcdly to the pilot as one of the
destroyers dropped out of line and
made swiftly for its mortally wounded
consort.
The British airplanes returned and
reported what had happened. A patrol
returning a few hours later stat*
- " "
ea tnai uiey uuu swu uvc uciuau ucstroyers
returning toward Ostend. By
then the sixth, torn and shattered, la;
with many another twisted and rusty
companion, under the sea. ;
. !
FELT FOR SHOES UNDER BAN
Manufacturer of Heel Pads and Inner
Soles Stopped by War Industries :
Board. !
I
Washington.?Box-toed shoes, fell
heel pads and felt inner soles arc
doomed for the period of the war. Th
war industries board announced thai
the manufacture of felt used for theg*
articles must be discontinued as soon
as present supplies of raw material
are exhausted and at once if its manu-;
facture interferes with the fulfillment
?f government orders. The board alsc(
called for a report of the stocks obi
hand of wool felts and jackets usee
in the manufacture of paper. Suggestions!
xpom ttiqHd trt hrinp nhnnt th<
greatest service of these now in us<
and to prevent destruction and waste.
To F*ed 65,000 Yanks. \
Chicago.?Charles Weeghruan, president
of the Cubs, has taken the jot
of feeding 65,000 soldiers daily for th<
government at the largest artillerj
camp in the country, located at Smith
1 iown, Ky.
LITTLE DIFFERENCE IN BOYS
Silly Idea That Those Born in May
Are Naturally More Cruel Than
Other Youngsters.
What is the origin of the belief that
boys born in the month of May are
hv noniraO Tn Vnfijc onH Ailfiripfl
V.1 Uti KfJ UUIUI^ . xu HVIVO uuu
Jolm T. Page says that he was born in
May, "and as I look back into the days
of my boyhood I am often horrified to
recall many acts of cruelty perpetrated
by me, and at my instigation, on birds
and animals. I seem to have delighted
ia these acts of cruelty until I was
about twelve years old, when they
ceased." Mr. Page adds that as a man
he is supersensitive. "I cannot now
kill a bird or an animal withott experiencing
most poignant feelings of
abhorrence of the act."
Are not nearly all healthy boys deA?n*a1
O TKat? THAWA (n A111*
DUUCUVC QUU UUCIi XUCJ ncic Ul vux
little village, writes Philip Hale in the
Boston Herald. One of our favorite
amusements was the reckless employment
of sling and buckshot. We would
lie on the roof of the minister's house
on Elm street and plug horses, dogs,
farmers In carts or on wood sledges,
just to see them jump. Nor were we
then aware that surprise was the chief
-? J- - * ?tj. ?v,~i- ?,ni.na a
eieuutmt Ui wiu jliikis niiai uia&ca a
man laugh so when he sits down on a
bent pin." Riddling the windows of a
schoolhouse was almost as good sport
as tearing off the pickets of Deacon
Bodman's fentie. Hitting little boys'
heads with iceballs, not snowballs,
was a favorite winter amusement It
was considered a good joke to kidnap
.a youngster at night, take him far into
the Bridge street'graveyard tod then
run away from him. Tormenting cats
and dogs was common when a small
boy was not easily caught The slingers,
the throwers of other missiles and
the tormentors of animals were surely
not all born in May. nor were an oo>?
born in May skilled in rude or ingenious
torturing.
MORE VALUABLE THAN GOLD
Real Treasure of Peru Was the Potato,
Though Spaniards Did \
Not Realize It.
The gold of the Indies was the attraction
that led Columbus to sail
westward, that carried Cortez to Mexico
and Pizarro to Pern. The Incas
had large stores of the precious metal,
representing, no doubt, the accumulations
of many centuries. The capture
of such a booty resounded through
Europe. Spain became for a time the
wealthiest, as well as the most powerful,
nation of Europe, and this was
ascribed to the gold of Peru.
But Peru held another treasure
much more valuable for the nations of
Europe than the golden booty of
Pizarro. Carrying the potato to Europe
was an event of much more profound
significance in relation to the
subsequent history of the world than
sending the Inca gold to the coffers
of Spain. But nobody understood the
value of the potato, and its Peruvian
origin was generally forgotten before
the plant became well known. Instead
of Peruvian potatoes we call
them Irish potatoes.
The potato was the basis of the
ancient Peruvian nation and has attained
almost the same importance in
other parts of the world within the
last 100 years.?National Geographic
Magazine.
"Puaet Sound Lobster."
Seattle is consuming only about half
a ton of octopus, "devilfish," a week,
according to fish dealers of that city.
Bnt this consumption is bound to
jump as soon as the Americans become
familiar * the taste of this
Inhabitant of the u^ep. The Greek
fishermen, who consider the octopus
a great delicacy, call it "devilfish;"
while the Japanese fish dealer gets
calls from his people for "tafeoand
when Sing, down Jn Chinatown, places
it on his menn card he gives it a name
that only a Cantonese can read or understand.
When cafe managers uptown
decide to give their patrons a
treat the lowly devilfish probably will
Cnnnd Ifthotor."
UtTWUIC JL U^Cl wvuuu .vvw>v..
Improved Fuel for Airplanes.
That the Germans are using a new
and improved fnel for airplane engines
was the statement of Leon Camen
before the Aeronautical society.
To gasoline is added one per cent of
tolnol and one and one-half per cent
of alcohol. The mixture gives a sharper
ignition than simple gasoline, and
while it exerts some deteriorating effect
upon the metal, the short life of
the airplane motor at the war front
means that the motor is discarded before
the deterioration becomes serious.
Toluol is a coal tar product and is
the base of that powerful explosive,
trinitrotoluol.
"Bear" Proved Harmless.
A white bear had been seen in the
Alps near Ofenburg, Switzerland, peasants
reported. The alarm created
some excitement in the mountains. The
Troro forppfl in arrange a
auiuvnu^o ?T v*v ?w. ?
great hunt to run down the "animal."
The hunt was successful and the "animal"
was cornered. He turned out to
be a poor Russian deserter clad in a
sheepskin coat who had been running
around aimlessly.
/*kti?Ak MAU?HW
VlfUIVll iwvw??^v |
Flatbush?Bees to church lately?
Bensonhurst?Sore, I was there last
Sunday,,. .
"Anything new doing?"
"Indeed, yes. Grimes* boy, who is
home on furlough, was there, and the
dominie announced: 'The young man
In khaki will now take up the collection
in his? helmet"*
'AX EAST WAT TO REDUCE FLESH
I Drink Hot Water and Take Tassco.
Haven't you often wished for a
medicine to reduce your flesh? Somethin^
that does not require dieting or
calisthenics? Well, right bere you
have it in 5-grain tassco tablets,
which you may secure at the Newberry
Drug Co. They are pleasant to
take, perfectly harmless and cause no
restrictions of habit or eating, and
reduce the flesh, little by little, until
you are down to the number of
pounds you wish to weigh. Too much
flesh is undesirable, as most quit*
stout people will readily admit, and
it detracts from one's good appearance;
makes one clumsy and short of
VlT*QO +Vl *
WI vuuu.
There isn't any reasoni why anyone
should be too stout, when there's
this much-tried, perfectly satisfactory
remedy at Newberry Drug Co. Tassco
tablets (don't forget the name) are
recommended by physicians and are
guaranteed to be perfectly harmless.
Refuse substitutes, if you can not
come to our store, we will mail tassco
to you.
t
j
, r?ob nuwi?iauiuy wovi
Men have begun to reclaim theCatt*
fornlan desert by irrigation. The Imperial
valley is the first word in the
bringing back of the waters to the
thirsty land, but it is by no means the
I last. Towns like Brawley and Im!
perial now stand where the mesqnlte
once grew and the coyote howled. The
limit of man's progress iq the valley
is sharply defined. The "field" of alfalfa
or grain faces the desert, the one
wearing a fierce scowl, the other a
gentle smile. Close by live the desert's
conquerors, big upstanding folk,
/vrin A# AM Otim^
aiiiiu tuc suiiucoo ui au uai o??>?
mer. The irrigation canals flow music*
ally everywhere. The houses are
ringed round with cloth-screened verandas,
which do duty also as living
and sleeping places. The people al'
ways seem to be on the defensive
against the desert. But they have
made it blossom like the rose, and are
making it pay. Soon the desert of
lost hopes, of burning heats, of intolerable
mirages, and arid solitudes
will be a land of teeming thousands
and of plenty. /
Famous Soldier Poet of Italy.
Gabriele d'Annunzlo, Italy's famous
poet, wnose nying teats are tne aami*
ration of his countrymen, has not the
slightest fear of death, and he has a
presentiment , that he will die in action.
To a friend who interviewed him he
remarked: "My worldly life is ended
What can I do after the war? I shall
write no more. Every time I go ott
on an expedttion I hope it will be my
last. That is the reason for my fearlessness.
The finest end I wish for is
to die for my country."
Pudg/s Bravery.
'Dn/Irrrr" Jo o V \T P A mo-n voll
M. UU6J 10 U X? AU* v* AM ?* V<M
known to many American soldiers in
France. He recently spent a night Id
a front-line dugout While he was
there a deafening barrage rained
around the dugout for a full half as
hour.
Everyone wanted to know afterward
how Pudgy liked It
*1 fear," he confessed, and the everlasting
smile broadened as he spoke,
"that I'm no braver now than before.'
Proper Pirate.
Ton seem to be rather prond of be>
lag a pirate/' remarked the trusty Ilea*
tenant
"I am," replied Captain Kidd. *Tm
a regular pirate, I am. When I want
to -sink a ship I superintend the jot
in person I don't sit at home and
send a lot of scared sailors out to take
chances all by themselves in U-boats.'
I way
Suffer? ^
Mrs. J. A. Cox, of AI- /J
derson, W. Va., writes: /J
"My daughter . . . suffered
terribly. She could rjk
not turn in bed ... the
doctors gave her up, and ^
we brought her home to i
die. She had suffered so yj
Ys\ much at... time. H;iv- YAk
YA ing heard of Cardui, we trA'
?A gotitforher." WA
y? Tlie Woman's Tonic v\
"In a few days, she be- f/ya
jfc/J gan to improve," Mrs. J/J
t/J Cox continues, "ana naa
ffVJ no trouble at... Cardui >jl
yfl cured her, and we sing A\
ol its praises everywhere. ya
-^1 Y/e receive many thou/jk
sands cf sirr;Jar letters rjk
/J every year, telling of the /|
/s gooa Cardui has done for /j
yfl women who suffer from /J
yi complaints so common to
f A their sex. It should do
^ ar4 to?- M y