The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, January 24, 1924, Image 7
THE PEOPLE. BARNWELL. S. C.
UN OPEN LETTER
TO WOMEN
/eflt of Mrs. Vogel's Terrible Suf-
A^fering and How She Was Restored
to Health^by Lydia L Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
-
Detroit, Michigan. **My troubles
were severe pains in my back and ter
rible bearing-down
patina in my right
side, also headaches
and sleepless nights.
I first began- having
troubles when I was
16, and thevhavein
creased as I grew
older. A little book
let was left at my
door, and Iread
what Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable
Compound has done
or women and decided to try it. After
;he first week I could go to sleep every
night apd I stopped having that nervous
feeling' and got a better appetite. The
doctor had always said that an operation
was the only thing that would help me,
but I never had any faith in an opera
tion. Since the Vegetable Compound
has started helping me I do n6t suffer
the severe pains, feel stronger, and am
able to do my own work. I am more
than glad to tell my friends that it helps
where other medicines have failed.”—
Mrs. Gus Vogel. 6606 Pelouze Street,
Detroit, Michigan.
A record of fifty years service must
convince women of the merit of Lydia
EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
BALCONY' FaHs. CRUSHING
BOYS AT TRACK MEET.
New' York.—With a snap like a
pistol shot the iron railing of a
balcony in the Thirteenth Coast
Artillery Regiment Armory in
Broolklyn 'gave way during a
school boys track meet, catapult
ing 150 boys forward and down
ward in a twelve-foot fall which
sent 32 boVs to hospitals, the con
dition of seven being reported as
very serious.
Many of these had one or two
broken wrists—in some cases tbe
bones projecting through the flesh
—or Serious head wounds.
Not a boy escaped injury in some
degree but inany. though stunned.
struggled to <their feet, brushed the
dust from their colthes and nursed
their ffurtsin silepce as they made
dhe'ir way homeward.
Emergency* calls brought 40 doc
tors and 14 ambulancesto the
scene, while firemen aided the
adult spectators in rescuing the
- small victims • from the tangled,
shrieking heap beneath the bal
cony.
RECEPTION AT WHITE HOUSE
to Transport federal troops
ACROSS TEXAS REFUSED* BY *
ACTING GOVERNOR.
SEC. HUGHES- FAVORS MOVE
Chief Executive Fears Outbreak Be-
Tween
is aricT ”5fate’s"
Citizens.
ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE IS
BRATING ANNIVERSARY
AMENDMENT.
Painted Beauties
At a dinner party held In a hall
attorned with “Trmtry benuttfuf'" prttnt^'
Ings a speaker, wishing to pay a com
pliment to the ladies present, pointed
|tJ fhe paintings on the wall and said:
“What need Is there for all these
painted beauties when we* have so
many of them at the table?”
Methodist Board’s Fine New Home at
Capital City- is EQEmally._Pedi-
cated.
Austin. Texas.'-— Permission to
transport „ Mexican Federal troops
across Texas was-refused by Acting
Governbr T. W. Davison, in a tele
gram to Secretary of^tate Hughes.
Possibility of trouble with Mexican
residents on the ^ Texas border
promptejj the refusal, the Acting
Governor said.
The Obijegon government had sought
permission to transport troops from
Naco, Ariz., to I^aredo, and Eagle
Pass, Texas, where they would re
enter Mexico.
The State Department at Washing
ton indicated that the Uiyted States
Government looked "favorably upon
the request.” ‘
Lieutenant-Governor Davidson, act
ing as State Executive in the absence
of Governor Pat Neff, ftequested the
State Department ‘ af^ Washington,
thYoiigh which the Mexican govern-
F VE KILLED AND 28
. INJURED AT PORT ARTHUR.
fort, Arthur, Texas.—Five men
’ weyfi killed, two are.missing, six
were seriously injured and- 22
slightly injured in an explosion of
16 high pressure stills at the Texas
company refinery here. The prop
erty loss was emtimated at from
$600,000 to $800,000.
The dead are from Beaumont and
Port Arthur. Two of'the more se
riously injured are expected to die,
it was said at the hospital. Twenty-
two received first aid treatment
and were sent to their homes.
OFfER MADE FOR
THREE POWER COMPANIES
WOULD PAY $100,000.00 IN
— - RENTALS.
i
PLAN 100,000 HORSEPOWER
yj
LUI
jii
3H
M
Ma
A LETTER
*T have used
Pe-nx-na In my
family,lor over 25
years for coaghs.
colds and throat
trouble.
Llld
not have contin
ued all this time
ALL INJURED ARE JAPANESE
NUMBER OF LIVES ARE LOST
AND SERIOUS. PROPERTY
D A M A (jE.- — —
r
M0THER1 GIVE SICK CHILD .
“CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP”
Harmleta Laxative for a Bilious
Constipated Baby or Child.
Cohstlpated, bil
ious, feverish, or
sick, colic Babies
jind Children love
to take genuine
“California Fig
Syrup.” No other
laxative regulator
the tender little
bowels so nicely.
If* Sweetens the
stomach and
starts the liver and bowels acting with
out griping. Contains no narcotics or
soothing drugs. Say “California” to
your druggist and avoid counterfeits!
Insist upon genuine “California Fig
Syrup” which contains directions.—
Advertisement.
Washingtob.—The fourth anniver
^fry of the Eighteenth Amendment,
was celebrated by the thirty-year Jubi-
iee convention of the Anti-Saloon
i«eague of America, with addresses by
prominent drv leaders, a reception at
the White House to deliver a pledge
of loyalty to prohibition and the Con
stitution to President Coolldge. and
dedication of a headquarters building
for the Methodist' Board of Temper
ance, Prohibition and Public Morals,
within the shadow of the Capitol.
Prohibition Commissioner Roy A.
Haynes declared "the way of the vio-
Shocks Coming in the Morning at 5:45
O’Clock Approach September
Quake in Intensity.
Tokio.—A number of lives were lost,
many persons seriously Injured, and a
heavy property damage caused by the
second great earthquake which has
stricken Japan within five months.
The victims of the shock, so far as
is known,-were all Japanese. Mo'st of
the casualties it was believed were
confined to the vicinities of Tokio
and Yokohama where the trembler
expended its greatest force.
The shock came at 5:4.5 o’clock.
menfs request was transmitted, to
notify him if the matter was consid
ered urgent.
Formal protest was addressed to the ln 6abitants of Tokio and "Yokohama
approaching those, of last September
in Intensity but was comparatively
brief in duration. It awakened the
Governor of T§xas by Reincaldo Es-
and caused them to flee to the streets
parza Martinez, representative at San alarm. Thousands of residents ate
Antonio of the de la Huerta revolu
tionists, and opposition to the pro-
theif breakfasts in the streets, not
daring to return to their homes.
posed troop movement was expressed
by Mayor R. M. Dudley, of El Paso. . 1
Martinez requested denial of pas- wor * 1 Japanese
later grows more difficult,” and “the
day of the feet-rich-quick bootlegger j > n K a large number of Y'aqui Ih<
is almost a thing of the past.”
Mrs. Mabel W. Willebrandt, assist-
ant attorney-general, urging elfmina- l.
tion of politics in connection with dry ,liem through the l nited States,
enforcement said the "system of wording to. an El Paso dispatch.
A number of fires broke out in
Tokio and Yokohama, but the rapid
fire fighters
sage “in the name ~of the‘ Mexican P revente <i ‘hem from spreading. Re-*
people now in rightful revolt against port8 have b * en ^ived that a num-
imposition and Russianizing of our l * 5r of railway, trains were derailed,
Mexico by Plutario Elias Calles and' althou * h U i9 uot kno ": n h u ow man t y
Moscow agents ” . , casualties were caused by these* acci-
Approxlmately '5,000 troops from the [
states of Sinaloa and Sonora, inf’-id-
1S. !
will be available for service in the , , .. , . ,
rastprn zohes within one week, if Th» Pkrt.ot » frtlght
permission were granted to move
ac-
Would Lease For Period of 50 Years
and ContribulerMiliion tb'ChemT
cal Research.
Washington.—Secretary Weeks re
ceived a joint offer madj by thr.ee
southern power companies proposing
a 50 year lease to them of jthe gov
ernments power project at Muscle
Shoals, Ala., for which $100,000,000 in
rentals will be paid during that period.
The companies propose under the
lease to construct transmission lines
for power, making it available to man
ufacturing centers of thb south and
other sections of the country to pro
vide' 100,000 horsepower at cost for
use in the manufacture of fertilizer
at Muscle Shoals, and to contribute
a fund of $1,000,000 to be used under
government control in electric-rhefhi-
cal research. Other provisions include
an offer to purchase the Shefflel steam
plant at the shoals for $4,500,000 or
lease it if the government prefers to
retain -ownership of that unit.
The proposal was sighed by X. M.
Clark, of the TrhtteWFr Etecttlc
er company; E. W. Hill, of the Mem
phis Power.and Light company, and
Thomas W. Martin, of the Alabama
Power company. It will be carefully
studied by war department ^officials,
it was said, before being studied by
Congreas for final decision along with
the other offers being considered by
house and senate committees.
not f
found
and
had I
it gilt
as recommended.
Geo. Castidjr,
Standitb, Mich.
P*-ru-M has
been hi constant
use hi the Amer
icas family for
more them Fifty
y«*sN»
Sold
Tablets
/Shenandoah Crew Praiaad.
Lakehurst, N. J.—It was the cool-
headed work done in a few seconds
that saved the* Shenandoah from de
struction tfhen the giant airship was
dents. AIL railway lines between j torn from her mooring mast by a 72-
Hiratsuka and Chigasaki were broken,
and communication between Tokio
and Kobe was cut off tempprarily.
bootlegging has so • entrenched itself
If the federal Government shows
in many communities, particularly . ,be demand f° r passage of
the big cities, that it has fastened to the troops is urgent, and guarantees dreds of ^ omf , s i n ’Tokio and Yokoha
it allied crimes of robbery, murder and am P' e Protection to Texas citizens, am wore fl 00( i e d
the reque'st will be t reconsidered and
mile gale that swept the Atlantic
coast and carried her on a careening
chase to New York city, it was as
serted by those who made .the arratic
train at Totsuka, near Yokohama. An flight,
en-gine-was hurled from the track at, ^ When the gust of wind tore the
Omori, a suburb of Tokio. navy’s pride from her 165-foot moor-
Besides sporadic fires caused by the ing mast- with a crash th.at 'could be
temblor, water mains were ripped up heard above the storm, those on
in many—places and streets and hun-1 board instinctively did the right
thing. They leaped for the levers that
The Generous Roomer
An impecunious temmt Jiad not paid
the rent of his room, for ..several
months. *
"Look here,” said the*landlord, “I'll
meet vou half wnv*. 1 am ready to
J.ur.iiet half of w-hat you o*ve!”
“Right. I'll meet you. I’ll forget
thej/ther half." '
arson.’ •
Senator \V. N. Ferris, of Michigan,
asserted .that "any survey of indus
trial condition in the United States;
any survey of crime, especially grow
ing out .of the use of alcoholic liquors,
ought in itself to convince the most
every effort will be made by officials
of Texas to co-operate with the’ Na
tional authorities, according to Mr.
Davidson.
Acting Governor Davidson express
ed himself ais* in hearty sympathy
It was reported that Odawara, a
city on Kawatsu bay about 75 miles
southwest of here, suffered consider-
released the ballast, and, instead of
crashing to the earth, the ship stood
still for a moment, shuddered and
started to float away in the storm.
able damage from the- shock, although The officers on. board declared the
THICK, SW011EN CURDS
that make a hors*
A ABSORB
also other Banchaaor 8w*B-
inga. No feiMor f BO MmAT
gone, and h«rsa kept at
work. Economical—only a few drops
required at an application. $2JO par
bottle delivered. Book S A froo.
V. F. Ym*. 1k^ 5101
Relief - «
. coughs
|UaePi9O’0-chU
relieve* children and
A pleasant wrap. No opiates.
^ 33c <m4 60c stan mU .
The Only Hope
Jack—Say, Sam, do you think yonr
tailor will give me credit on a new
topcoat? , ' ;
Sam—Doeg.hfc kno\^ you well?
Jack—No, I’m sorry to say.
Sam—Then possibly he might do it.
/
Oh, how hard It is to die and not
o be able to leave the world any better
for one’s little life In It!
FOR INDIGESTION
WWGCSTK*]
Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
details fronuthis place are still lack
ing-
skeptical that prohibition prohibits,”-?-any. move which would, bring
’ind Senator Morris Sheppard, of Tex-
j as. contended that “prohibition in the
' United States is both a permanency
| and a success.”
T - * : The annual meeting of the Penn
DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN i sylvania Anti-Saloon League also was
! held here, with Governor Pjnchot and
William J. Bryan among the speakers.
tranquility Lb Mexico, hut he. point- Advance Gasoline Price,
ed out the danger of bringing Moxi- Loulmlle. Ky.-An advance of two
can :tm ft p.Con Texas'soil because of cents a^allonMn the pnee^of gasoline
strong differences of opinion concern- ' n Kentucky, Georgia ad on a was
ing the revolution among “the'Mexi
can; citizens residing on this side.
Aspirin Marked With “Bayer Crosc”.
H^s Been Proved Saf^by Million*.
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are., not getting the genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions amf
prescribed by physicians for 23 years
Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin,
Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv.
Federals Defeat in Hard Battle..
Washington.-- Mexican federal for
ces have defeated the revolutionists
in a hard battle at Tepeaoa which has
Cotton (frop Reports Provided. .
Washington.-^Troposed legislation
providing for semi-monthly cotton crop
reports by the department of agricul
ture and ^cotton ginning reports by
the census bureau, the formpr to he
approved by a departmental board of
prescribed membership, was agreed
ship started to drop and they belov
ed they were within six feet of the
ground when she started to rise.
And it was the same cpol-headed
work throughout the seven hours’
flight against the elements that per
mitted tlie Shenandoah fo outfight
the storm and return to her hangar.
Sailing a whole ship i n« storm like
that would be no easy task, and the
work of those on board was made
doubly difficult by the fact that her
nose had been tourn away and a parj
ELL-ANS
254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
t)
Considered Smoking Crime
Sultans and priests of Turkey-oifce
considered smoking tobacco so serious
a crime that in tna’ny cases torture ami
death was tin* punishment meted put
—to thooe indulging in it.
resulted in reducing a “strong ele
ment of the rebel army to impotence; U p (m a t a meeting of the six members . .
the Mexican embassy said in'a state- r t1l0 8P nate and house who recently filling , station price in Louisville
a , .. 18 cents a gallon, which include
Beat Way to Relieve Pain
Is by direct outside application ami
the best remedy Is an Allcock’s Blaster
—the original and genuine.^—Adv.
The mprulizer considers life but g
dream, until Ihe dempra-lizer conies
along and wakes Mm up.
; y-
When a woman lias a "headache it is
natural; when a man has a headache
It is usually acquired.,
Loosen Up That Cold
With Musterole '
Have Musterole handy when a cold
starts. It has all of the advantages of
grandmother’s-mustard plaster WITH
OUT the blister. You justapply.it with -
the fingers. First you feel a warm tingle
as the healing ointment penetrates the
pores, then comes a soothing, cooling
sensation and quick refief.
Made of pure oil of mustard and
other simple ingredients. Musterole is
recommended by many nurses and
doctors. Try Musterole for bronchitis,
. sore throat, stiff neck, pleurisy, rheu
matism, lumbago, croup, asthma, neu
ralgia, congestion, pains and aches of
the back or joints, sore muscles, sprains,
bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of
the chesL It may prevent pneumonia
and "flu.”* - - ,
To Mothers: Muktcrolo is now
made in milder.form for
babies and small cliildren^
Ask for Children’s Musterole. .
35c and 65c, jars
^and tubes.
Better tRttn a mustard placter
ment based on official advices from organized a so-called cotton bloc in
Mexico City. ■ I Congress. The proposed bill also
‘Rebels under Generals Maycrtfr? wou i ( | provide for discontinuance of
and Villareal have, been decisively cotton acreage estimates of the
defeated after a hard battle at Tepe department of agriculture based cn
aca, the statement, said. After he- farmefg' intentions to plant, which
ing driven from Tehucan by federal were sa jd to have brought protests
troops under General Lsgenao Mar- f rom a u sections,’on the ground that
tinez. the enemy took up a position j^py were not accurate.
announced here by the Standard Oil
company of Kentucky.
The advance follows increases in
crude ofl prices and the marking up
of gasoline prices in various states
recently, S. W. Coons, president of
the company, said in commenting on^of her sides .ripped to shreads.
the announeemet. Officials of inde- j' To what extent the dirigible -was
pendent companies have indicated ad- damaged has not ibeen determined
vances to a Ibvel set by the Standard definitely. A minute examination of
would he made. . each of -her countless -parts will be
The two-cent increase brings "“the made before repair work starts and
Louisville to Capt. F, R. McCrary, commandant of
the naval air station, estimated it
ori
your eyes.
s a
one-cent road tax.
Decrease in Consumption of Lint.
Washington.—Cotton consumed dur-
would take a*month to repair the
damage that was apparent. Ite said-
detailed study would he given to the
question of evolving a nose cap. that
ing December totaled 461,560 bales of. would stand the lunching by. a gusty
lint and 40,802 of linters. compared wind as" well as a steady gale.
with 531.631 of lint and 48.069. of lint- —~
ers in November last year and 529,342 Rebels Bombard Mexican Ports.
at Topeaca, on the railroad between
Tehuacan and Puebla.
“General Urhalejo attacked here
and completely broke Up the com
rnand. which was made up of several
of the-strongest units at thu disposal
of the Vera Cruz rebels. . /
Cotton crop reports under the plan
would he issued semi-monthly, instead
of monthly.* between ? August 1 and
December 1. and ginning reports would
be issued "on the -same* day and'at
the same hour” as the crop reports.
The hill’ would require approval of
crop report by a board of at least
five members, n'o less than three of
whom shall be from cotton-growing
of lint and 49,143 of linters in Decem
ber, 1922, the census bureau an
nounced; — - —
Cotton on hand December 31 was
held as follows:
•In consuming establishments: 1,-
Tampico,—Rebel gunboats bombard
ed the city and port of Tampico. The
news of the bombardment being re
ceived in a telephone message from
the observer stationd at La Barra.
The message said:
“Jesus M. Palma, chief olj the coast
Japan Fears Money Panic.
Tokio.—Reports received here from
the country districts to the southwest -secies.
of ’Tokio and Yokohama, near Fujft- ; T
ama Mountain, have brought the Women Burn to Death,
knciwh death toll in earthquake tq.ap- Greenville* N.C
proximately thirty . ^ son
Great anxiety is manifotcr’in finan
cial circles over the probable effect
the new quake destruction r ~rhay have
upon tluv exchange and loan situa
-tion,
623,453 bales of lint and 112,949 of
linters, compared with 1,438,813 of lint 'guard, at 9 o clock sighted the rebel
and 95,851 of linters on November 30. gunboats Tampico and Sarazoza which
last vear, and- 1,917,231 of lint and had prevented six ships from entering
123.215 of linters on December 31, the port. The vessels were five tank-
1922. , ers and the Dutch steamship Maas
Tn public storage and at compresses,; j dam.
3 526 164 bales of UnP and 64.232 of * “Then the rebel ships directed their
. Sa . lll f H,ul ". linters. compared with 3.770.542 of lint rtre against the suburbs of Varadero,
years old, and blind, wgs nn(1 43 6r , 9 0 f linters on November 30, ; located to the left
SO years.,old, and blind, w&s a - n(1 43 669 of linters on November 30, located to the left of the' Panuco
burned to death and Miss Annie Mills, laF . t/VP! ^. and 4 069.470 of lint and 38,- . rive?, destroying several ' Chinese
80 years old and deaf, probably fa-.,4.^ of lftiters on December 31, 1922. houses. How many of the occupants
tally burned when the home of Miss'' Tnipor t s dur | n ^. December totaled perished is not known; An airplane
Mills, in the Uo'x Mills section Of this 35 601 bales, compared with 16.564 in sent up to reconnoiter identified both
November.- last year,, and 68,547 in De- the rebel boat's.
county, was destroyed by fire. Few
Hundreds "of, houses, chiefly those details qf the fire, which was of un
“already damaged by the disastrous determined origin have reached here.^
feiiihteM, of last September, or Strue- The two aged women’ lived alone
tures of a temporary, nature hastily in the house. The.body.of Mrs. Hujl-
erected as shelters after the catas- son was burned to beyond recogni- i nr i ud ; nK ‘5 097 of linters. in Noyem- are in air expectant^mood. There .is
comber. 1922. ~ " ’ i '‘ At noon the ships cruised 600 me-
Exports during December totaled ! res of$f4he mouth of the Panuco river,
845.581 "balee. including 11.630 bales of trying to find-a landing place,
linters. compared .with 770,002 bales, The foreign residents of Tampico
h * 0
trophe, were shakenr'down or dam
aged.
Weeks Receives A-nother Offer. *
Washington.—Another offer for the
development of the Muscle Shoals,
Alabama, properties by private capital
Was received by Secretary Weeks
Trtrm
tion Physicians express little bope bf>r last year and 607 ^ 8r ,3 inr j U(ljng 2,- considerable- nervous tension among
for recovery of Miss Millsr
' ULl
445 of linters in December, 1922.
de- in December, indicate that hog pro
dined to rhveal but characterized as-! duction in. the United States has pass-
financially reliable. ^ Th@*' war seere-! ed the crest and a downw
Hog Production Decreasing in U. 9. Mexican Rebels Blockade Tampico.
W ashington —^Tho pig survey made p-j p as0 Texas—Rebel forces. In a
by th'* Department of -^P r ' r hlture, j r0 j T1 j ) j ne ^ army and naval move, have
with the assistance of the rural letter blockaded the port of-Tampico, wire
less dispatches received in El # Pako
•stated. According to the dispatches.
the native population.
MITCHELL EYE SALVE
heals Inflamed eyes, granulated lids,
styes, etc. Sure. Safe. Speedy. 25c at-
all druggists. Hall & Ruckel, N. Y. C.
SICK HEADACHE
WAS BELIEVED
Missouri Lady Says She Was
Miserable With Constipation
and Sick Headaches Until
She Used dIack-Draught. .
Forbes, Mo.—“I have used Black*
Draught, when needed, for the past
twenty-five years,” recently said Mrs.
Emma Grimes, who lives In “Green
Valley Farm,” near here, “and It has
given perfect satisfaction.
"I began taking it for a bad case of
constipation. I would get constipated
and feel Just miserable—sluggish, tired,
with a bad taste in my mouth, f
didn’t feel like doing anything and
soon m/ head would begin hurting
and I would have a severe sick head*
ache. . '■
“I don’t know who started me to
taking Black-Draught, but It did the
work. It Just seemed to cleanse the
liver. Very soon I felt like' new.
When I found Black-Draught so easy
to take and" easy acting, I began using
it In time and would not have sick
headaches . . .
“I .can recommend Black-Draught
very highly, for: liver trouble, head
ache or constipation.”
Constipation lead's to a great deal of
sickness among those who" 1 neglect to
treat It without delay. The poisons
which* constipation forces your blood
to reabsorb may cause great pain
and much danger to yonr general
health. * \ ♦
Keep Thedford’s Black-Draught in
the house and use It promptly for re
lief at the first sign of constipation.
{ '
carriers of the Postoffice Department
$11,000,000 Suit Against Ford.
New Orleans, .La.—Itsserying the
decision of the federal court of south
ern Florida, the United States circuit
court of appeals ordered that the
Virtually all of the "navy" commanded .$11,000,000 damage suit filed by Ed*-?
by officers who joined the De La Hiter-., ward H. Huff. of Miami, Fla., against
he flsrt would have a study made by
engineer and ordinance exports and
leaving - harbor.
tary also r.efuseiU to discuss details ment-is well under way. A decrease ta revolt was outside the port and the Ford Motor-eompnay, of Detroit,
of the new proposal, explaining that of 8.7 percent in the 'number of sows gblps were prohibited from entering or Mich., be remanded to Florida, for
hearing before a federal judge instead
of- a jury.
It was iiejd thta the maUer'in ques
tron was- one of equity and the pres
ence.of a jury was not necessary.
Revolutionary forces are massed in
iarrowing in the falL of 1923 from
the fall of 1922 was shown. There was
later would decide what action might also a decrease of ■^rT' per cent in ? f ront of t b e town on the land side and !
be taken by the department with ref- the number of sot^ bred or intended i a g enpra i attar fc is imminent. It Is-sald
frence» to 1 kt-- ftnvl disposition ■■ I to he bred this soring." ' r 1'n * radio ^isoatch.
Thedfords
Skin Troubles
-—Soothed—r—
With Cuticura
* '