The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, March 12, 1925, Image 3
1
1 8
4
< /
U v
V t
t
V v!
~T
r
i
*. -
Thursday, March 12, 1925.
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA.
Page TfapM
• ♦!<*
MILLION BY ROCKEFELLER.
Yhree Motor Chasers Combat Liquor
i >v '’ Smugglers in Local Waters; Trim
'*»' and Speedyjp
New York.—JoTin D. Rockefeller,
has given $l,00jLHP0 to the
H
, ^ at
; tom
Sam s celebrated "rum chasers,” the
’[♦coast guard No 2:146 an,! coast guard
* No. 2347. They are a part of the
, extensive prohibiton fleet which the
government has built to combat the
^activities of liquor smugglers, and are
designed and constructed for that*
^special purpose. They arrived here
this week, and are under command of
Boatswain W. Westling, who is officer
in charge -of the AB-5, /the anchorage,
/ and'boirtling ,ship .here, so th;rt In alb
there are' thre£ coast guanf i^bt'ot'*
craft stationed at t"lj_is port.
That the efforts of smugglers to
• bring in contraband liquor via,water
will be considerably handicapped by
, the two motor boats Uncle Sam has
*■ f;
pent here is a foregone conclusion.
They are gray, trim, speedy ships,
-..■equipped each with a Sterling Sfx en
gine. They rtmw only two trmt.-herrce
will be able to navigate very freely
Each is 36 feet long, and has a crew of
four. Tt is thely main business to run
down “rum runners” and help check
the flow of forbidden beverages that
the "runners” try to land along the
Atlantic coast. A number of them
have been huilt, and are in operation
at various ports, under the United
States coast guard.
.mpton
negro'
Anso
n of th
the
meht fund
institutes
need b
s, ch
ommitt
ee bnd
Mr. Rockefeller’s donation was
made unconditionally, and brings
the endoment fund now being rais
ed to $3,500,000.
....."‘liiagwucb as. t 'iOfT£..j25nn-.:p^*
'formtiiy rrrmromvT m^ttesergrttools
ever since my father took me as a
small boy to visit Hampton, when
General Armstrong* was its head;
because «they provide, an education
whiah fitfcsr boy^ afld girls ttvbe use*.’
Tul 'citizens, \fhb'rtief they go for
ward jto higher j and professional
education! or go directly into agri
culture, industry or business; be-
c«uae they gTress^the -develoUuttnt
df thdract'qr ftlpng w-ith Thd ’d^rel-'
oprhent of mind and body, and be
cause of my life-long interest in the
[colored race, 1 shall count it a
privilege to participate in the-oam-
paign to the extent of $1,000,000
As I understand it. this leaves you
still $1,500,000 short of you p goal.”
IMSHiE
TANTS.
G00LID6E TAKES HIS OATH
Cheyenne. Wyo—The town of La-
voye, literally was wiped off the map [
of Wyoming -and its 1.500 residents
-ijeprived of their homes by a rujing
of Federal Judge T. Blake Kennedy,
who ordered- that the entire vfltage
and its populace must he moved in
order to make a clear patlcJor a giant
j-pf industry—petroleum.- ! . v
f* 4>tThlit buildings, business Jionses,
^ homes — everything — must go; for
Judge Kennedy decreed that the-Ohio
j Oil company, which leased the land
on whi^h the town is located from
•i the government for oil development,
is entitled to full possession within 60
'days. On April 21, 1024,' he held
that the»towri had been established
-t-without-4«gal iMUjia-but did not pro
vide for enforcement of a removal or
der.
; The decision means that if any
: sign of the town Is left in 60 days,
those responsible will he subject to
* <4tat’ion for contempt of court.
Lavoye is a modern incarnation of
j the typical boom mining town of the
REPORTS SHOW THBEE
DEAD IN fARTHdUAKfe.
'A-M.nrf t’ • ~ r ir",.-
’Quebec. Three persons dead,
scores of 1 fiVrmes damaged''by framer
ahei tire,' ( on« church dollaiikcd/’and
general cohkfernatfbh' amrtn^
dents of the St Ti«wTence and SS4E
udhay, valleys are the known toll
of the earthquakes.
In the Saguenay (Flstrict it was
reported the quakes had been al
most continuous since 7 the first
ones. ■
As lines of rominunication are re
stored, telephone and telegraph
bring from remote sectors of the
quake zone accounts picturing the
phenomena as of far more disas
trous consequence than at first re
ported.
An expectant mother, Mrrf. Al
phonse Auger, or’ Quebec, fainted
from fear at the height of-the earth
quake and shb died.
. * * i n£ t. I £ *
•HI
■ii.inn «u.—u-
> i
>u ill
FEDERAL JUDdE ORDERS LIQUOR
' ■ • " ' fi .1. - , |
TAKEN FIFTEEN MILES, OUT
t i i ■
HELD-
CWm 1 FaD : Cr«4U
PjBkfeamiVetsWbl
tor Remarkable
■ju’u-fmr*
___ illdi I
- WeUs»«m t Or
-LydU E.
le Compound
RecoTetr
4-’ ; ' *
took Lydi> E. Emk-
New
Dutch sthooner
NOTED FINANCIER IS DEAD
MORRIS K. PARKER COMMITS
SUICIDE IN NEW YORK *
CLUB.
New York—While the bureau of
missing persons conducted a quiet
t
P. and N. Inspires Big Expectation.
Spartanburg—The Impression is
growinghere, in the light of recent
activities on the part of the Southern
1’ower company,;, that the Biedmont &
I •
Northern railway is working quietly
on plans to build the long discussed
and connecting link between Spdrtan-
burg and ’Gastonia, in spite of unsuc
cessful efforts to confirm the eon<4tt-
sion
It is known that representatives of
the Southern Power company have
been conferring with property owners
between this city and Gastonia recent-
INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT IS
CONDUCTED CALMLY AND
WITHOUT INCIDENT.
Sold west. Prosperity has been gen-ihunt for Morris K. Parker, vice presi-
eral since the town was established :dent of the Equitable Trust company,
in 1920 and the hundreds of men em-jhis body, with an ice pick embedded
ployed in the breathless rush for oil near the heart, was discovered in a
spent as freely as they earned. locked room of the exclusive Univer
Lavoye is located in the heart of sity club.
the Big Salt creek oil field It puffed The verdict was suicide The mo
, up between patches of alkali and ^! ve believed to have been disclos
ly and quietly assumed the duties of Usage brush almost overnight, 40 miles ^ j n ,t W o notes found near the hodyJ which vicinity the craft was eaptur-
Washington.—Calvin Coolidge calm-
Yorkf—The
j Zeehond and a $2po,000 cargo of wiaes.
j seized 15 miltis off shore in 1923, were
! ordered forfeited, under an unprece-!
dented ruling by Federal Judge Gar-T
! vin, of Brooklyn] authorizing the gov- i
eminent V 0 confiscate vessels laudinicf
; or purposing to land liquor in the ;
l nited States apy indilt on the
high seas
Judge Garvin held that the venture
of the Zeehond constituted attempted ,
fraud as described in sec'.tjjm 592 of ;
the tariff act of 1922. This section
says that if any person enters or at- J
tempts to enter merchandise into the 1
country by means of false invoice, de
claration or paper of any kind, or b>’
means of any fraudulent practice, j
such merchandise shall be subject to
forfeiture.
The Zeehond -decision is considered
by federal authorities to he unique
and farreaching in that It unholds,
for the first time, the government’s
claim to the right to capture and con
fiscate alien rum smugglers outside
the 12 mile as well us outside the
three mile limit.
The Zeehond was captured as she
lay off Fire island on December 7.
1023. She carried 2.180 cases of cham
pagne and wine taken aboard at Zee-
bruggs and destined, according to the
ship’s papers, for Cholera banks, in
h*m/f(V«gftafcie€o(nposjq5ltojnake me
i If strong.! was troubled
* "—-*• with mv and
u
<-t(,l
with my ’back: and
sides hurting me till
I could , not do my
work, and whenever
I caiifoht cold it made
Vfifl IVrPJfWJK !5tnce
Where before I
anythin
first chi
pound my side and
badt ‘don’t !)other
me and I can do my
housework and care
for my children now,
Id hot feel like doing
anything or going around. After my
Id was do
was bom about four years ago
I saw an advertisement in tne paper
about the VegeUble Coimpound. I knew
It would help me, but I was afraid to
try it because people said it would help
vou to have children and I knew I was
having children fast enough. But 1
thought if it would help me it would be
better to have a whole house full of
children and have good bealtik. I be
came stronger from taking it and my
husband says I look like a live woman
instead of a dead one. When Spring
comes I-am going to take your Blood
Medicine as lam very thin, gl will an
swer 'letters from any woman who
wishes to ask about your medicine.
Mrs. William Butts, Wellaton, Ohio.
is gone
the presidency, for four more years, i north of Casper when oil drilling call-
and Charles’ G. Dawes Wept inttr the ^ thousands of men in that vicinity.
, ♦ , . .j . In 1922 it took an other spurt of grow-
vice presidency, with a velocity thaW gbontinued until 1923, and it
ebaU^Fed many ..prauedeatS- .^uB'^mriB "the‘game hustling village, bav
in a brief inaugural ceremony, which
never deviated from the decorus pro
gram laid down by him long in ad
vance’, Mr Coolidge renewed his oath
of office on his grandmother's Bible
ly. It is believed by many local busl- | and. in a short inaugural address re
ness men that the power company is
preparing to erect’ a Tine which will
provide power for Piedmont & North
ern line when the link connecting the
city with Gastonia is built.
The deed conveying a lot in Spartan
burg township to the Southern Power
company was filed, hut efforts to as
certain the (ictails of the transaction
staled his policies of governmental
frugality.
But General Dawep furnished a suc
cession of surprises and thrills that
J stirred senatorial ire. First, he read
the riot act to the senate on the neces
sity of revising its rules to outlaw
the one-man filiburster.
Then, instead of swearing in the
ing one large mercantile establish
ment, three weekly newspapers, nu
merous motion picture theaters, auto
mobile agencies and other institutions ’ ^-1 shape. •
of work and play which fortune seek- His ..wife was prostrated,
ers demand. declared Ihe Parkers were
One of these was addrpasqd, to Robert t;e.vvnue,£uUer^ r
C. Adams, of the Equitable Trust com-
pany. The address borne by the other
was kept secret by police.
Officials of the trust company were
quick to issue a statement that Par-1
- i . j*: ■ l . J . ■ ; . Vi
Captain, supercrago and crew were
acquitted last January of charges Riat
they conspired to violate the Volstpad
act. f
ker’s affairs as vice president at the
head of the bond department were in
and its possible effect upon any plans brought up in a bunch to save time,
that .max be ■afoot-have- been unsue- honored custom, he ordered them
cessfut.
Friends
‘‘ideally
Like the mushroom town It Is, its happy." Wall street considered him
buildings ar« flimsy—hastily thrown !one of the most promising, financlers-
tegether shacks for the most part— of the generation. At the many so-
and easily can be demolished. It is Qjal and business clubs of which he
expected that the business interests I was a member, he was looked upon
of the town will be transferred most- as a prosperous and successful per
son without a serious care. He was
48 years old and a graduate ol the
class of ’01 at Yale.
Only one possible (Jije to * motive
Barker’s business as-
ly to. Salt Creek, a nearby oil town
Fail to Hit Targets Behind Planes.
Fortress Monroe. Va.—Officer^ of
Messages received here from Gas-
nonui.-e I usiu,,.. n, 1.. th(( anti . airc . ;aflt defenses here admit- was suggested. ’ 1
brought up in a buc.h to .»a\e titu *^ 4 P(1 dpffia - t In parTVfpa’T&tf lit by sociates said he.
Drastic Liquor Crusade is Startfd.
1 New York.—Padlock proceedings
rather than the arrest of offenders
will be used here in the future to en
force the prohibition law, United
States Attorney Emory R. Buckner
said. Mr. Buckner, who succeeded
Colonel William Hayward, hejjan pro
ceedings in United States district
court tb close for hi rletst one year
14 of the city’s leading cabarets, dubs
and fashionable restaurants.
Mr. Buekner’-A drive is the most
drastic in the history of the city, and
if Riicrtssfurl. considerably will dim
tne lusteF’bf the^llghts of New York's
Then he cut short the ceremony of
j t
tonia and Greenville indicate that senators signing the hook, aqd finally '
* w *' — # * - ^ I > «—n. <»»». --tv . <■>»,_ 1
* Langley field aviators to demonstrate
both there cities believe thdt P efl j wfthGUt'atfy
motion to that effect, he announced
that the deliberative body would*pro-
ceed to attend the inauguration of
President Coolidge .outside.
The senate and its distinguished
guest thereupon trooped to a vastly
different scene on the east plaza,
where thousands already were wait
ing to *see the induction into office
mpnt Northern is seriously consid
ering -such a development this year.
The impression is also stnaig a t'other
points, so it is reported here .that the
P & N. is moving forward quietly with
plans to begin the conencting link.
Added impetus has been given these
reports by the recent publication of
figures showing that the revenue of
the Piedmont & Northern railway.has l ?f Mr. Coolidge, while millions more
increased at e rapid and steady gait in a D over the nation waited at^tmedin
recent years. It is conceded in husi* radio sets to hear what he said. Tfie
ness circles that the completion of a calm, measured tones of his inaugural
link connecting Spartanburg and Gas- address were carried to the greatest
tonia would increase the road’s earn- audience ever addressed by any man.
ing capacity very appreciably. ^ n d as his last words ended the brief.
simple inauguration, millions must
have heard also the calling of the
bugles to set in motion the short in
augural parade which would end up
the day. 4
Back at the White House under
escort of trotting cavalry troopers,
the President and his guests took their
places iu a glass enclosed reviewing
stand to see the passage of the score
of governors who had places inr the
pageant, the marching foot troops.
sailors and marines, the rumbling col-
The -sheriff immediately went to umns of artillery, and a whole hero
had 'complained of ’ great white way The fashionable and
severe headaches for several days ‘ expensive supper^clubs, and night life
He left home, according to Mrs. ' resorts against which, he already has
Parker, in excellent spirits!, saying he sought padlock injunctions are the
was goihg to his offices. A phone Beaux Arts restaurant, Club Moritz,
call several hours later conveyed the , Club Borgo, Club Mirador, Club Deau-
informatlon that, he had not arrived ville, Coloney restaurant, El Fey club,
the house aircraft investigating com- there. After waiting several hours for Udo-Veniee, Meadowbrook restaurant,
mittee that antiaircraft guns have further, news of her, husband, Mrs. j Monte Carlo, Moupln’s restaurant,
The demonstration was arranged by
the war department as an outgrowth
in the recent air power’ contmrersy
at Washington, witnesses having told
“T'HERE are thousands of
women, just like I once
to rheumatism, muscle pains,
and horrible stiffness. I had
ides
men and
•lares
nt pains,
wrong
rheuma
tism for yean. I
didn’t realize that
tncreaking Mood
cells had tNe effect
of completely
knocking out rheu
matic imparities
from the system.
That is why 1 be
gan using S. S. S.I Today I have the
ig
strength I used to have
yean ago l I don’t use
my crutches any more,’*
S. S. S. makes people
talk about themselves
the my it builds up
their strength. Start
S. S. S. today for that
rheumatism. You’ll feel the difference
shortly.
S. S. S. is sold at all good
Sniff ctorea in two aiaes. Tbs
latter sue la,more economical.
I : Worlds Best
oodMedtebte
Rend name and
address to 8. 8. 0.
Co.. HI 8. 8. 8.
Bids., Atlanta,
Oa„ for special
booklet on Rhea-
msUem A Blood.
Hainey Kills Rural Officer.
Bcnnetjsvillp. — C. A Hargrove,
Marlboro county rural policeman, is
dead, sot twice in the chest with a
32 caliber pistol, and William S.
Hainey, white man. is in the county
jail, having come to Sheriff J. A.
Weatherly and given himself up. Ho
had found the officer with his wife, in
. liis car on .a lonely road, he told the
- sheriff, and had shot him twice and
1 lm lnnl hi
given aviators during the war little Ranker notified the police and the bu-
cause for apprehension. ! neau of missing’persons.
The tests were witnessed by mem-1 - —
hers of Congress and high army and
navy officers, including Brig. Gen.
Classificatior. of Cotton Opposed.
New York.—The New York cotton
Piping Rock restaurant,
Juvenile Court Has Problem.-
Oakland, Calif.—Juvenile court offi
cials here were trying to dispose of
problem created by Earl Nine, 13, who
is^said to have confessed he broke into
Win. Mitchell, assistant chief of the exchange, through its president,
army air service, yhose open and vig-iward E. Bartlett, Jr., sent
orous disagreement with aviation poll- urging senators from New JYprk to op
cies.of the two departments gave rise pose the demand of Senator slnlth, of
to the recent controversy and found a/Kouth Carolma, in Congreea, that the I because she reprimanded hiat before
sequel in the announcement at Wash- department of agriculture immediately his class mates for negligence in his
ington that Lieut: Co. James E. Fechet begin reclassification of. raw cotton studies,
would succeed him in his present posi- stocks in New York -warehouies. j *
tion April 27. when his term of office Heads of the department at ’Wilfbh*') N*wspaaer Output fclrger. '
expires ington admitted that there had been Washington'.—-Publjsber|| of^newspn-
In the night problem, five powerful anonymouit complaints that Rome of' pefe and perlbdlrals ^n the United
the home of his school tedcher and cut
into shreds clothing valued at $750
searchlights were switched on at full the cotton in warehouses wijii) belpw
power, sufficient to send a beam of standard. If chargee w’ere made obn-
light 19,000 feet into the air, imt were eerning specif j bales, it was said, the
unable to find the aircraft as they flew department would attempt to rec las Ri
al ranges less than half that distance, fy them.
States T»a4 an outptjt Jn. 1922 valued
at $1,268,501,236, an increase of 12.9
over 1921, thb last preceding census
year. The census bdreap figures,
made public, shewed that $7^9,^98,584
the scene with Charles -Peele, another
rural policeman, and found Mr. Har
grove sittin gbebind the steering wheel
of his car dead.
Rotary D strict Meets in Columbia
Columbia.—Rotarians of tne Thirty-
eigl.th district, which comprises South.
Carolina and western North Carolina,
ar^ coming to Columbia April. 16 and
17 for the district convention and Co-
1 tun ilia Rotarians are anticipating
vHW pleasure their visit. Among the
features will be Homer Rodenheaver as
song leader
The Rotary club of Columbia is mak
ing elaborate preparations for enter
tainment. '
There are 31 clubs in the district.
It is expected that every club will he
represented and many of, them with
large delegations
The “Rotary-Anns” (as the wives of
the Rotarians are tallied) are pxptmtod
to attend in ' large numbers,! and ar
rangements are being made tor their
entertainment and comfort.
Meet in Hartsville.
Hartsville.— The 15th annual meet
ing of the South Carolina Conference
of Social Work will be held at Harts
ville. June 4, 5 and 6, according to an
announcement made by C. W. Coker,
president" of the conference.
Thfc meetings are to he held at
•Qoker college, as their commence
ment is over Jhne 2. The delegates
ars to be entertained in the college
dormitories at a very nominal 'fee.
W* B. West Is tbs local chairman of
arrangqmcata.
of squat battle tanks, who had grumb
led and rumbled their way up Penn
sylvania avenue in a steady thunder.
The service bands in their gay uni
forms gave color to the procession as
they marched with trumpets blaring
flourishes for the commander in-chief,
but the old familiar trappings of past
inaugurations were almost all abent
and the whole parade had gone by in
little more than an hour
But, despite the simplicity of thO
territory, imposed by the wish of the
President himself, Mr. Coolidge took
office this time in his own right by
the overwhelming vote of his fellow
countrymen, amid scenes stjrangly con
trusting with tljat other inauguration
19 months ago yin his fi/ther’s nome
in Vermont. '''■ 1 "
Then they was need for h^ste; a
great tragedy had set:’turTnirk on
the nation A hurried, simple reciting
of the otath his father administered'
that night gave the country a new
President almost before word of the
death of President Harding .could he
carried throughout the land.
f \ *
25 Killed in Blast at Factery.
London.—Art' Exchange Telegraph
dispatch from Berlin says four heavy
explosions occurred in the works of
the Anhalt Explosives Company near
Huttenwerk, 25 persons being report
ed killed.
One building was wrecked by the
explosion, udjls^tbe message, dnd many
injured persons were taken in ambu
lances to Huttenwerk for treatment.
The explosion shook the town of Hut
tenwerk severely, smashing many
windows.'
* — “We call your attention to the fact of the total was contributed by ’re-
Mitchell Loses in Air Quarrel. that this (reclassification) matter lies ceipts from advertising, and $361,173,-
General within the jurisdiction of the depart- j 329 came from subscriptions and sales.
William Mitchell, center of the-recent ^nent of agriculture which umioubte
controversy diver air power, will be ly is competent to handle the matter, Falla From Tug, Drowned,
succeeded as assistant chief of the without the grave disturbance which Tampa, Fla.—B. L. Allana, 30, Port
army air service by Lieutenant Colon probably would be produced if under-j Arthur, Texas, was drowned here
el James E Fechet on April 27. when taken as suggested by Senator Smith,"
his term of office ^expires The as- said - the cotton exchange chiefs tele
signment. announced and bearing out gram to Senators Copeland and Wads-
expectations that such a change would worth.
be effected, carries with it th rank of *‘We earnestly beg that you whl
brigadier general, and General Mitch- oppose the passage of any such reso- ' .
ell will revert to hi* own rank as. lutions." Marquis Curzon Collapses,
colonel after the date.
Commenting on the appointment at
Norfolk, Va., where he had gone to
witness an anti-aircraft gun demon
stration near Ft. Monroe, arranged by
the war department as an outgrowth
of the aircraft controversy,' General
Mitchell asserted:
"He is a good man. I shall abide
by the departmenCsrorderr* - --
Dr. Thornton s
-SCZ-
Druggist
when he fell overboard between a tug
boat and the docks at the Tampa har
bor. His body was recovered Accord
ing to police, Allana had Just been
discharged as an employe of the tug.
-London,—Marquis Curzon, lord prea-
35 Miles in Ox Cart to Pay Taxes.
Aiken. S. C.—An ante-bellum negro
of Aiken county recently rode 35
miles in an ox cart to pay a tax of 40
cents due the county.
amused when
u
Isaac Johnson, 80-year-old negro far
mer of the Perry section in the lower
part of Aiken county, drove.here to
pay his taxes, instead of mailing the
amount. His tri|) required 10 hours.
blent of the council and leader of the
house of Lords, collapsed while dress
ing for a public dinner at which he
was to have spoken. Physicigns-mere
summoned, U but found his condition
rtbt serious. They insisted, however,
that he keep to his bed, cancelling all
immediate engagements.
SICK JPABIES
What Other Liniment
fTBo This?
f (
Twenty-six persons Then, he patiently awaited his turn ! labor amendment was rejected by the
Defeat Child Labor BIP.
■Indianapolis. Ind—The federal'child
Twenty-Six Killed.
Leningrad.
were killed and an unknown number a t tl)e window of the county treasqr- ; lower house of the Indiana general as
ed iMAtug* semWy with^t^dtocuMfon nrroll c
wounded by an explosion of oxygen pp-g office t 1
tanks in a building in tfi.e venter of He found tnat ‘
Leningrad. - 4 . j cents.
Planes Collide, Aviators Escape.
Arrested For
n twof - Lafayette, La.—EdwitiTJulfbeau, 62.
in t mid- -and his '25-year <4(1 nf^ppe#. -Adam
it 4,()00 Guriheuu. arresP^h-under charges J <of
San Antonio. Texas;—When
Kelly Field planes collided
air at an evelvatiqn of about
feet, both, pilots jumped from the violating the Stale afiff-duHingU-faw,
wrecked machines in parachutes, land- were under $500 bail at their farm
ing safely soon after the burning homes near Carenero.
planes, locked wing in wing, crashed The men were arrested under the
to* eartfi. j :• J ' > U charge that the uncle had challwaged
Second Lleutcnajif McCallister, his nephew and tfte latter gcceiKed
and Cadet C. A. Lindberg, of the ad- At the sheriff's office it was said they
vanced flying school of Kelly Field, were preparing to use shotguns at
yiere the pilots. With the exception 25 paces. Ill-feeling had existed be-
Of a few mintpr scratches, neither was tweed the two for some time, officers
' V • , h isalA •
It. re,
etfrlleU in
siofi.
AN IRRITATING, burning'
liniment would have aggra
vated this case. Mustang Lini-
L ment brought prompt relief
because its amazing healing |
, powers are quickly absorbed by
w the skin.
To do good, a liniment must work
nto the blood.
Make this simple test with any num
ber of different liniments and decide for
yourself the one that ls*most effective:
Rub the liniment into your palms.
Then wash thoroughly. A few hours
later you will notice the odor pf Mus
tang Liniment In the urinary secretions
—proving ithat It has been absorbed
into the blood. What other liniment
passes this test? Now you know why
Mustang Liniment is spoken of so
highly everywhere.
—ttfl/-—>1 nO-a-i drntrA Aensml stores.
son
tPR ^ % pTT mm
p(<* Mill Three Genofti^ons Find Beech'
New York.—Colonel Paul Hender- j am’s Pills the Only Remedy
spa, assf^ft«J^t■ poRtmfi^pr ieniral in. r „ *4 W •*»»*( *»«*k »to«nach. «nd B««ch-
• h^gts of tramlportatitfn,*’ >oTd tht’ '• ^ 1 cmn
UhamW of* Coififlier&r of &e sfdte off '
Netjy York that an all night jnall
servlse betwee^ this cit* and Chicago
'votild he to ope'tetldft"‘ti©t 4»tef than
Juiyi . J ■ ?
All resource of his dnpartmsnt. fie
said, worn btlag coacasnrnted bpon
the perparatiow of an airway bntweea
the terminals via Cleveland, with land
ing and beacon stations not mor* than
17 milos apart.
. tUo fodhd them beneficial to mr
children: on* especially, who Inherited her
mothe-t weak Motnach. There w no remedy
1 value aa much aa Beecham"* Pilla. 1 hay*
tried other* without auccesEr’
Mr*. A- {fcmphrtea. Methuen. Visas,
-twrits
417 Canal Street, New Yoak
Bay Croat yoar druggist in Of and fM Vonss
For --anici^dticm. {slioumeu, tick
seller dlfeatwe oilmcntt talw
'tsr
Beecham’a Pilla