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/ ' / raURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1932 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, S. C. . < j. / 1 PAGE SEVEN •«)/•;/«/€»/^"the*^aster executive ' Sujylyirg a wt«k-towc«k inspiration for tlir heavy-hur«ltiic<i » no will I'lnd. every human trial paralleled iiTthe experiences of "The ilan N’lJxxlv Kn .ws'.' EIGHTEENTH INSTALLMENT Synopsis; Johnny Breen, IG years old, who had spent all of his life aboard a tugrboat, plying around New York City, was made motherless facts are so startling no one I we mmt «ma-as wo remain lontor on hard-faced pri'eat-'and'monevr^hang-1 of t) /r'l-lr!?- . ""S;: -^-ind ,ong tawes exaitirg the bars FINAL SETTLEMENT Take notice that on the 28tk day of Nov., 1932, I will render a final ac count of my acts and doings and Exe- jeut^of the e-tate of John Rolin Wil- ' son, >^ccased, in the office of the ! Judge of Probate of Lauren.s County, dt 10 o’clock a. m., and on the same day will ^ply for a final discharge from my triK^tT^.s Executor. /■ Any per.soi^indebted to said estate THE OL’TDOOR MAN .-^Icd forward around the young man. He is notified andVquired to make pay- The air was filthy with the smell of! strode on, looking neither t{> right, ment on or befo\ that date; and all animals and human being herde^to-! nor left. He reached the counters | persons having clahns against said es- gether. Men and women trample^d one! where the dore cages stood; withjtate will present tl^m on or before another, crying aloud about their irii-!qu’ck ; ure movements the cages were said date duly provefK or be forever precations. At one side of the court opei.ed and the occupants released.' barred. \ were the pens of the cattlp; the dove' Brushing aside the group of dealers ” HOLLIS CAUSE, cages at the other. In the foreground, j who had taken their stand in front ■ Executor. the cattle pens, he threw down thejoct. 21, H).t2.—ll-17-4tc. s and drove the bellowing animals would be mud-throwing. In the vearieruder than the plumbing in King Al-^ . . f ... . y., , " i .. wi. u wl .j j • *. wu . uwiujf. 11 lilt: yrai, — f, f, , utmo.-t farthing froijf those who camejout through the crowd and into the: >{()'ri('E ()F FIN.\L SETTLEl^ENT after election we are too busy to pay! feed’s hut. We are just beginning to serious attention to such things. But, wiien an explosion sank the boat on .the plan, the real w’orking plan, must see the faintest gleams country for food, for freedom and for yr ul on. to buy. One would hever imagine that i streets. 01 light. Ine f -x Pftnm «nH fnr' ^ piacc of wofship. ^ ct it The whole thing happened so quick-i was the temple^^the center of the re- [y that the priests were swept off! which he, his mother and the man he be ready for use some day. We hear play, the city for economy, for ooncon- ' Li t et ^.w howe^r th rco lec so much of the transportation prob lem. I have read carefully what you called father, were living. He is,the only Survivor, struggling through the darkness to shore. ... At dawn, amid surroundings entirely unknown; h!S'already, too mtlclT erCWdlng frow thr life in New York begins, ynable to read, knowing nothing of life, he is taken in by a Jewish famliy, I'ving tiation, for study and for education.a xu And by city I mean the great open-'^he ed themselves and bore down on him We have too much transportation hearted city with trees and grass, and thT traffedv'ofTt ^ norma ., m a body. W ho was h<^ that dared this eady, too muc1r erdwdtnig front the ! fo»ntain» splashing in the-aun. The — dt^^'anc^. J^hc^ l^ he outskirts into the congested city. But -''ty with clean streets, with ample! ‘^tand/r.g a htt e > apart from the from? By what authority did he pre- Notice is hereby giveoi that I will on^he 29th day of Nov. 1932, at 'll o’clock A. M., render a final account of my acts and doings as Administra trix of the e.state of E, B. Sloan, de ceased, to the Probate Judge of Lau- rens County. S. at Laurens. S. C. what can stop it? “Your sewer report astonished me. and doing a second-hand clothing bus- j Almon Strauss /ound and drew the incss cm the Bowery. . . . From the I bulky blue-covered document from a homes, with every life worth living ! “Down below cf birth control. ^ . hour he set foot in the city he had tojde.sk. “Colfax often told- me of the ' of the agony? What do they know in the tcmiple sinc'‘ his twoHth fight his way through against bullies I conditions, but I had no idea.” i building? What of planning fa^ Joseph and -Mary took him and toughs .' . . and soon became so j “x\n island completely surrounded, ahead ? I may never .see the beg^-! “1’ eniol.eil us a .son ot prof’eient^that he attracted the atten-[ by sewage,” Harboard remarked., ning, but, John, arul you, too. ^r-[ ^• tion of a would-be manager of fight-j “Where boys bathe anil rats run wild i board, you mav ^ee, you may kiipw'. j His chief memory ot that previous ers wh.i enters him in many boxing j at night.” ! “But I am afraid of the city. I am ■ visit was of a long conversation with tour#<aments. ... It was here that Pug “New York and vicinity, dumping, afraid we have planned too far ahead. ^ certain old men in a cpiiet room. He Malone came into young Breen's life jits watt*' material into its front yard. People are getting confu.'cd, hnd rents! had not witnessed the turmoil in the ap old fighter who was square and ■ converting its nau’ow rivers into im-'go h'ghcr and highci. I anUclosing up'outer courts, or if he had, it maile honest. ... He took Breen under his ! monse open cesspools; it’s a crime.” this place and expect to ^ve. But my; small impression .''ent him to night school and Almon Strauss paused and thumbed! heart is here. Qod help city. eventually took him to a health farm] the pages. j Where the recuiring storm-centers | weeks he had looked forward to the he h.id acquired. . . . The scene shifts; “The greatest danger, sir,” John in-[of wild conventions/and campaigns, visit to the temple. \ ' family of Van Horns of Fifth torpOxCd, “lies in the absolutel.winade-j iaged amid sprouts of promise, old do be sure some of the older is'^introdueed. Gilbert V’an , quate sewer .system of the lower por-i Madison Stjuare Garden stands only j muttered about the extortions uf . / money-changers at the Temple. A wo-, . 7^ X . X . X X X “ I I sume to interrupt their business? iSCl %» * L 11 C4 III ^I / * \ ^urnii?hinjj to tho youri^ niHo froni X-uz* " ^ watcheii in' amazement. which .'."those foolish folk talk igriid’Jally into anger. It was written, ‘.My house'shall be called! >1. W hat do they knowi*^/ fi’.mdiar sight to him. He had not a house of prayer for all the nations,’' *^he That I will at the same time ask the Court for final discharge of my duties “This is my authority,” he cried, “Itjas Administratrix of said estate. .'\11 persons having claims again,st e.state of B. Sloan, deceaserl, will file the same duly itemized and verified on or before said date or be but .\/e ha,ve made it den of robbers. HOOVER’S PLAN IS ATTACKED ro”ever barred. ll-24-GU‘. JANIK L. SLOAN. •Administratrix. on his viuithful ' mind. But this dav was different. For NOTICE OF ( LEHK’S SALE I ' j Pursuant to order of the C(\urt in I ' (Continued from page one) [the matter of ClinNjn Building and I were enabled to .sell these high-inter-1 Loan .AssiHMation, plaintiff, vs Mrs. I est-bearing, but now' worthies.*, for-j Annie G. Martin and J. Gary Martin, I eign securities in competition with our xM. S. Bailey & Son. Bankers, et al, and the avenue Horn, lust of the old fatnily, is a man j - ones I own state and, municipal, IndustriuL defendants, I will sell at public out- and commercial securities.” He con- about-town, who meets Malone and Breen at one of the boxing shows. Van I Horn has a hidden chapter in his life, i which had to do with his mother’s i maid, years ago, who left the family when abbut to become a mother. It I was reported that she mairied an old captain of a- river craft. ^ . . \ an Horn i has a ward, Josephine, about Breen’s age. . . . Van Horn, now interested in John, prevails upon him tb let him-fi nance a tmurs'e In, civil engineering at Columbia, univer^y. . . . John and Jo- sephir.4 meet-^ become aUached tb ^ each other, love grow s and they l>e- > come engaged shortly after Breen j graduates from college. , . . Josephine j has anotherrsuitor, a man of the world j named Rantoul Josephine becomes restless as John gives TuTl altenfibh to his job and sails for Paris to select j her trousseau. ... At the lart moment Rantoul sails on the .same boat. At sea the great ocean liner crashes into an iceberg and ainks—all passengers taking t(» the lifeboats. A an Horn parishes but Rantoul saves himself— with Josephine. Breen learns that Gil bert Van Horn was his father. Jose phine breaks the engagement and marries Rantoul. F'or years .lohn bur ies himself in work. ITie U. S. enters the World war., Josephine sees Breen in France, but ne*remain8 eobf, tinim* pressed. The armistice is signed, Ran toul loses his great fortune, and suci Josephine for a divorce and obtains it. Breen, seven years in South Amer ica, completes his work and returns to New York. He meets Josephine again, and discovers that love is beit>g rekindled. Now V.o On With the Story. I man told how the,.lamb which she had’ I raised with so much devotion the pre- : vious year, had been -scornfully reject- i ed by the prie. ts, who directed her to ! buy from the dealers. ,\n old man re lated his expt'rience. Undeniably, they fliled the port folios of interior banks, sometimes by coercion, with this immobile junk, so that when the cra.-h came these haul s cry to the highest bidder, eitlxm iri or in front of ihe Court Hou.se at Lau rens, S. on sales day ir^ November next, the same being Monday tho 7th day of the month, during the legal hours for such sale, the following de- were in a state of paralysis, utterly! scribed profierty, to wit: ty Today Je.sus faced the sordid reah'^v. . . t,, , V, his cheeks flushed. A woman s . , .shrill tones pierced his revery like a unable to respond'to the legitimate re- respective commu- an era of bank,! failure.s unprecedented since the fou.i- a pea.*ant dation of the republic, unapproacl'oii by finan-cial collapse in any other na tion on the globe. “The state department at Washing- knife; he turned to see nudhor prot<‘sting vainly against a, ruthless exaction. .‘And siuidenlv, without a word oft^ • ..v., -t x' 1 X .1 X 11 u 'ton mav deny it.s culpabihtv until it., warning, he .strode to the table where; , ‘ ‘ i i i • xi. r i X , , , 1.1 ,1 spokesmen are black in the face, hu* the fat money-i hanger sat, aiul hurled ' . , ./ xL X rru .' the record explicitly condemns them. j “The official explanation given to I the senate of the United -States wa.s 1 sio manife.stly puerile and untrue, that, by unanimous vote, regardless of par-1 it violently across the court. The startled roldn'r lurched forwaivl, ! gra.*ping at his gains, lost his balance jand fell sprawling on the ground. -4-Anolh,..,- St..), ami a sm'ul.d lal.lei"' '/ '"“.'i' ^ , 1 1 xix 1 . ty^niVTsrrrn, that bemr rejected it'andi was over-turned, and another, and an-, ' » *u.. ..*..4,. 4... .i..e.:.,4l other. The crowd which hatl ihelted hack at the start hc'gan to catch a Josephine Lambert had ju^it sped by, bareheaded, her dinner wrap resplendent, her face animated, beautiful. glimmering of what'Wa^ up, and surg- Ice Cream Company In Receiver’s Hands tion of the city. Old brick conduits! in memory like a palace in Spain. fifty and seventy-five years old, runrj'Steei-antf-tile-tower-lwgh, and higher. ning to the river. The problem of' ♦ ♦ * drainage on Manhattan is simple, but I i, •, x. • • - -l x xi- .. X xix x J »x ij 11 u I “ environment that the fact that drainage should all be, i i, . .j . xu , l x • x Harboard and John paused at the into disposal works, into scientific i, .,xUx..c , n i xi a , X L ^ XL southern end of a walk along the Ave- plant-s for the recovery of the mag-i . . -xu -u x l <■ * . XL L L • -J Li nue, crowded with the great rush of a nesia, potash, phosphoric acid, chlo-1 „ „ .-j. . on, # i ’ , If .. .. ,1 mid-season aiteinuon. The friends rine, oxide of iron and nitrogen, all combined in almost ideal proportion The Laurens Advertiser says: The Ward-Garrison company, local ice cream corporation with a manufac- warned the stale department to desist from this dangerous and ruin iu* usur pation of authority. SecTetary Stiin- j son treated the unanimuosly expressed I sen.se of the United State.s senate with I a contempt that entitled him to im- I peachment. He persisted in his denial [that the state department was doing the very things which the record -•shows it wa.s doing.” Going on to banking prac’tices. Glass said it was a.sscrted on reliable au- thoity that “our .reserve bank.s en taring plant here and about fifteen; milliuns ilf dollars of accep store oOtlM’S bctwe'eTr-(-4i aides ton and Atuleisun, was placed in the hand.s thing unprecedented of ! tame.s for'frrrpiifn banks,” which he weie given to long tramps, to the di version of extended explorations in ‘.he city. “Here, this way,” and in a moment John Bieen stood close to .Almon Strauss. Harboard had ananged the meeting. .. “1 want to shake hands with John] Breen.” g j Harl>oard •had -managed to. .'Acer them into a corner near the stair. Al mon Strauss was leaning toward John, holding has hand. What a homely hu man being he wa.*l “John, I am so glad to see you. Very glad.” Almon Strauss was short, A stcKky build, almost humpbacked. “Let us go upstairs. I have the kev. You know more about the way* than - U” .lsy^B«se yqu lead.” As they followed John up to thie oT- fices of Colfax, up the dust-covered landing and into the inner room, a ■strong emotion came to John, a sen.se of loss overpowerin^^Be switched on the light and was agreeably surprised for use as fertilizer. This .seems to place the problem beyond the ability. . of our civic talent. A spoonful may be' great thing.-i were happening, ” , fu ♦ th n.t h4*rp and there and .screen-! f^e City wa.-: restless ami uncer- nine .said ve.st-Ti.ay tha the tain in its ancient harness. Drastic i nianu.actur mg fdant ha-, ceased op- methods were being prop.used, mer- trat ins but that the outlets would chants’ as.sociations and civic iiodie-s u-rnair. open until pre.ent storks are -'(lid out. The entire business, he sai<l, will he (list iintinued unle.ss a buyer is Frank IL (’aine, as receiver, under an, facilities of the federal reserve order signed ^me Monday by ( ncuit | “misused” in defiance of Judge \\ . H. Giimhall, who is presid- ^,f law, he said, mg over the'eommon plea.- court. ; through huge loans to banks which Tho receiver, who was placed under reloanod “to hioker* fur stock a $3,not) bond, was ordered to marshal purposes.” the a>set.s of the company with a view, -Smoot-Hawley-Grundy tariff of disposing of them and liquidating-constitutes moral insensibility as dipped out here and there and .screen ed, hut the great works, the scien- j tific works that would yield a fortune i to the city, the.^e are only part of the plan.” ‘ ‘ “Yes, John, the plan.” .Almon StrausN seemed to waken up from a study. “After all, the plan- must come first. Let us get the plan,” “1 have had a theory,” Almon Strauss went on, “a theory tha^ the ciiy will work its \^ay ou^ of the were stirring. 'Great agitation.s were taking public Voice. The huge muddle mu.u a sume some jiroper fm in. Civic pride was suffering a revival,” new Tones were stepjiipg to the fore, new i.ieals (<f .service were again lifting; abo\e tht* tumuli of the town. i They paused on the sharp oasis .south of Twenty-fifth street between secured again. - who wi.shes to open it up HOOVER requests PALMETTO VOTES mire. ' He stopped, piused for a mo-j avenue and Br oadway. A sni«>k-1 ^ |ing, churning ru.-h of cars and husse.s, Young Republicans league, today “They say that my people are nat-j hemmed them in. Across the way thc- k.^^j letter from President Hoover ment. well as econi'inic insanity,” he said. “It will take its place in hi.story a.s a legislative an<l ailinini.-trative enor-j mity, purcha.md from thi* govi rnment: at Washington liy the contributoi s to i .Mr. Hoover’s campaign fund. Eiiually with the frightful financial ilebacle, thus inea-ure is responsible for unetri- jjfiiyinent. .Along W'ith that intolerable legislative ba.lanl, known as the Faim Board act, these mea ures have reilueed the American farmer- to the point of penury. “Thus f hav<‘ ti'aced, with inerring accuracy I think, the causes of the panic and the inevitable consequences. These were not caused by the World All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, together with the im provements thereon or to be nfiadc thei'eon, lying, situate and being in the Town of (Tinton, ('ounty and l::^tHte afore.said, containing oneJialf acre, more or less, bounded and described as follows: Bojor.ning on Woodrow Street at the riorthea't coi'ner of it* inter section with Galvert .Wc., run ning north thence along the east side of Woodrow Street two hun dred j(200) feet thereon; thence north 89 e:ist along the line of property-ofJacobs one— hundriKl forty (140) feet thereon; thence north 1 east along the line of the property of Wm. P. Jacob.s twenty (20) feet thereon; thence north 89 east along the line of the profrerty of Wm. P. Jacobs thirty- one (31) fett thereon; thense south 1 west along the line of property of J. W’ill Dillard twen ty-nine (29) feet thereon; thence south 89 west along the line of prxrperty of Dr. T. L. W. Bailey fifty-six and two-thirds (56 2-3) fee* thereon; thence south 1 we.st along the line of property of Dr. Tr-fc?-W:—Bartdoy- TTundred * . ninety-one (191 feet thereon to Galvert -Ave.; thence along th<‘ north side of Calvert .Ave. one hundred fo'.ii'teen and one-third (114 1-3) fe< t thereon to the be ginning point at the interse?tion of Woodrow Street and Calvert ^ .Avenue. Also, all my right, title and in- ere.st of, ,in and to a strip five (5) feet in width over the prop erty of Win. P. .lacoh.s, hegi:-;ning at Woodrow- Strec* atul running hack East therefrom along the north line of pi'ofK'rty herein- a‘ oVe (iesi rilied for a di -tance of urally dwellers in cities. It niay be .-o. |old Amen corner had ended its t'areer. | young party members to I war or by European disturbanct's, as _Qre. himdred f »i'.tyr<*f’*‘ (1 U ) The premise,.-i and xProperty here;nalio\e described is identir'al property (onv^-yc'd to me hv Wm. I P, .lacohs hy'dted dated the 13th ' d.i.v of .\(*v. P.d’tt. i. Terms of Sab : Ca h.'The successful I tiiddi r, oth.er than the plaintiff,,wifi he ri-(iuiied to depo.sit with the Clerk : of Court upo:i the bill being knocked -Butth? Hebrews areTair aner^rt raee,jTjn>fin-al--<rbitfgef'a-14eg4»d by Mr—Uuuver We had in! a race that has held its tenets, has ^ toward the park, arches of triumph ] i 1922 largely gone through the process-: in cash (jr by cashier’s Kept its faith for centuries. If we are ; and of victory once reai-ed their fra-j (’arolina Young Republi-je.s of liquidation and of deflation in ! down either cTffceTT'oFTi $250.00 as evidenee of good faith ip .LLp., .x... —--....L. L,4 .LX. .... , ^ B FO110 H lOUllg m* p U 011 * | c oj J1 u 1 ud 1.1 w 11 oin* la i ...... T!..x hidder will to be dweUers in cities.^we must^louk j ^ forms and only photogr aphs re-1 ^ from i financial,, commercial and i to comply with the bid to our houses, to our future habita- main. Dewey returned there from the Lions (John Coolidge,"son of former Presi-1 enterpriBc. The country was prepared within fortv dav.s after the date of to.firid the place in excellent order.(know John had had an idea^t the Bureau must have vanished, TTke so much of the past. “I had them clean up and air the rooms,” Almon Strauss explained. “I ' expected you soon, would have called . I hav» lived in the elnme - 1, vi.nory at Manila Great hoate of men|,|^„, CnolidKe. President Hoover's let-ito go forwaid in an orderly fashion,, suecesstul bidder fail - the lower East Side—You may | niarehed by in 17—men with set fac- expressed appreciation for the aidkvheprthe speculators seized the remt, 1' i,. the terms of the bid of the South Carolina- Youok Repub-.aifd, under the ytimulatinit influence th,. deposit made will be licans in the presidential campaiRn. j and applause of Republican adniinls- , the-property will be ne- ^trations at Washinitton, embarked us . .... ,. .. ........ .„h...„,o.„t not know It, but I once stood on the es, young and tense — drafted from for you. on my return from Paris, but non Lipvitch?" John asked. curb of Hester street and watched a fight. I have known Fighting Lip vitch!” '' John spi'ang to his feet. Almon Strauss sat silent. “Lipvitch — Chan- this is better.” Along the wall the fa miliar cases of drawings seemed in tact*. The filing cabinets were as l^- fore, the bookcases had not been dis turbed. It seemed as if only an hour had gone since the times when he and Colfax worked late into. t)»e night, when he looked forward to the week end, to the Sunday afternoon,' “I have been back a few weeks. Have some chairs. I will not s^ what ia happening in Europe, the world is reforming, though the stable yoars are still a long way off. But my heart is here, gentlemen, always here,” Al- John, I knew you there. I knew 0/ you when you fought on the Bowery, My old friend, Lipvitch, is dead, you know. When the Tri-Plex shirtwaist factory burned down, Lipvitch had locked the doors — the shock killed him,” , “Please go on,” Harboard reminded him after a lengthy pause, “with your vision of the city.” After a moment or two, Almon Strauss continued in low, even tones. “I see a tremendous city rising in the future, a city of such magnitude that men today would marvel at the sight. the youth of Jhe Metropolis, tramp ing onward in the falling snow. A great void of doubt had come to the files of his little of-1 on a career of adventure and inordi non Strauss waved his thin hand The saving in heat, in transportation around, embracing all beyond the rooms, all out over the crowded mil lions about them in the city. “I have been rerted^g final wport of Col- fa»,” he said, “and your notations, your every excellent engineering fig ures, Mr. Breen. These papers have all been kept for me here. No—John; 1 may call you thit^ I credit you both,” John hai sUrted in protest. df supplies, in the waste motions of life, will compensate for the great congestion of men. Everything will be centralized in zones. People will live in groups close to their work, frith parks and playgrounds scattered in between. There is no value like the value of numbers, no potentiality like the mass potentiality of men, and the city is the natural conclusion to which Harboard and to John, a sickening doubt. To the east, they saw the great clock hands of the tower pointing to seven, and back on Fifth avenue the rush of motor cars came to a sudden stop with a screech of brakes when the high red light flashed on the traf fic towers alrove the gas-charged street. John Breen stood, as men have stood in the twilight of thick tropic jungles, gazing' at the beauty of the cobra, unaware of its significance. Harboard struck his cane on the con crete walk, a loud tap. John looked at him, and smiled — smiled with uncer tainty. Josephine Lambert had just sped by them, bareheaded, her dinner wrap re- fice b-jndles of surprising informa-j nate inflation that carried u» over the, tion. Once, when talking with Judge! precipice. The World war had no' Kelly, an agreeable old gentleman,! more to do with this, nor Europe eith- sold on the same or some subsequent^ sale day at the risk of the former purcha. er. The purchaser will be let into po.ssession of the premises upon the production of the Clerk’s deed. The himself asking more than he impart- er, than wars of the Phoenicians or stamps, deed and ed, Thomas Hetherington was prepar ed to submit a certai_n train of cir- cumttances, and to ask for the few places where time had failed to fill ' in facts. He wa.s on the verge of springing one of the really great sen sations of the city. “My dear Mr. Hetherington, what you say may be so. And then again it may not. You say you have talked with Mr. Breen. What did he say?” “He called it a-lotLof interesting conjecture.” . “ ‘But I believe it’s so,’ I insisted. ‘Well, if it’s so, why don’t I go the conquest of Gaul by Caesar. It recording. was caused by the combination of fac-l THOS W BENNETT tors which I have recited in the course! uVrens County] S. C. ' 1 l-3-3tc. of this address.” How Doctors Treat Golds aod Coughs splendent, her face animated, beauti-jou^ ^Uim my own?’ he asked.” ful. She was already far to the south,( “Well, why don’t he?” Judge Kelly on her way to dinner in one of the | looked puzzled. fine old surviving homes* of Washing ton square. 'Thomas Hetherington, the great editor, had pieced together much of the crozy mosaic history of the city. He knew and deducted, and imagined, (Continued Next Week). BUY COLLIER’S Collier'a Magazine—$2.00 year. In clnbe for $1.75. JAMES W. CALDWELL The Magazine Man . To break up a cold ovemight and re lieve the congcHtinn that makes jou cough, thousands of physicians are now recomoHinding Calotabs, the nausealess calomel compound tablets that give you the effects of calomel and salts without the unpleasant effects of either. One or two Caiotabs at bedtime with a ,'lass of sweet milk or water. mom- lUg your cold has vanished, your system « thoroughly purified sod you are feeling ne with a hearty appetite for breakfast, ‘at what you wish,—no danger. N -Caiotabs art sold in lOe and 33e pack ages at drug stortt. (Adv) ICopudln^ best for HEA^ becouse-^ 1 I* .faMS rttiaf by > Wta’t »p«** •*®**^"‘ ,9 ssttwe s-iiiaigiffugaag eteas-aHi IlMiMp