The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, September 12, 1922, Image 3
Honagt to National Horoos
M#unt Vernon t^e melcca^of virtually
nil Americans and foreigners who
coOe to Washington, is being rivalled
as a shrine by the beautiful T.tnetfn
Memorial, while the Waahixtftoi*
Mdunment in the most popular or the
thtfee shrines.
Visitors nnrobarfeg 84,112 w(|ht
duiipg
cat^d a tfm hufcttpl yartt Oflth ef
the White House. More than , one
flab of t^n
stop* in order to m the n%i&>rVl
tablets Ml the viJiMfe ladtiJflti ?side
the shaft. The remainder rode
to the" top fn the bttdttl* .eMMtor
which has a capacity of 86 persons.
More than 6,250,000 people haWr
visited the top of the monument
since it was opened fef observation
purposes October 9, 1888. No en*
trance fee is charged.
The Lincoln Memorial, recently
completed and .opened to the public,
was visited by 31,883 persons during
July.' Located in Potomac Park directly
west of the Washington Monument
it is rather inaccessible for
pedestrians; visitors usually ge there
by automobile. On a recent Sunday
2,000 persons were recorded as entering
the great building. It is rapidly
becoming a shrine for tourists.
. No entrance fee is charged.
General George Washington's Old
home at Mount Vernon on the Potomac
River in Virginia, 16 mile*
from Washington, long has been the
meeca of pilgrims from every patt
of the world, who go by steamboat,
electric train tod autoihobllto kept
as nearly in its original state as possible
by- the Lubes' Mount Vernon
Association it is a delight to all Americans.
During July approximately
"29,000 persons visited Mount Vernon
and during the fiscal year admissions
numbered 236,000. A 26 cent entrance
fee helps to keep the estate in
I first class condition.
The house where Abraham Lincoln
died, located opposite Ford's Theater
rm rri it. -i. i \r a*
at oid a en en street, nortnwest, tins
city, is another shrine visited by
many tourists. It was bought by
the United States in 1896 for $30,000.
Soma of the ''Village"
Wins Fight for Life
New York, Sept. 12.?Greenwich
Village, that Bohemian center regarded
as a perpetual fountain of
mirth, for a time was threatened with
its little tragedy, but now the tale
has taken a new turn and the happy
ending is in sight.
A fhw weeks ago Sonia the Cigafette
Girl was stricken desperately
ill. Heart disease, a hWtags form,
the doctors said. s ' _
For wetfes she lay in a hospital
ward, pale and wan. And very lonely
was Sonia, for she foutfft that hen
village friends, the poets and painters
who laughed with her and blew
smoke rings with her in cellar and
garret, had deserted her.
On the walls were none of the ga /
tapestrlds, the p&tntfftgB and the1
sketches in which she delighted. The
sounds which cafnfe -to her wore
omnious sounds, lacking the musie
and laughter which to her had constituted
lifs. 1
Sonia is only in her twenties.
Youth rebels at grim hospital walls
and white-clad doctors and nurses,
with their stethescopes and mysterious
charts.
But now doctors say that Sonia
has won her fight?that soon she will
be discharged. Evervone
knows Sonia in the Vil
lage. In her smock and sandals, she
could be Been any day walking bareheaded
through the alleys of the
Latin Quarter, shaking her bobbed
head violently when engaged in arguments
over Belles Lettres or the
theories of Freud.
Sonia?she has a last name but in
the Village she is known dirty as
Sonia?is a Bohemian. Thousands of
out-of-towners who have visited the
Village have seen her slipping from
table to table in the fantastic tearooms
which the Village boasts, carolling
the merrymakers into buying
a package of her cigar sites.
Sonia ia versatile. NoW ska would
make a little money at one thing, at
other times at another. Sometimes
she would make nothing at all.
Once she went to Boston and there
staged a Bohemian dance largely attended
by Harvard undergraduates.
Arrangements went a bit awry, the
dance wae not wholly a success, and
the police reserves had to be called.
A few months' ago She opened a
little shop of her own in Ae Village;
To her stock of cigarettes she added
erudite tomes and fanciful batiks.
Then she Was stricken.
Her acquaintances tried to find her
family. They were all dead, the aaid.
She smiled mysteriously whenever
she-tree asked whence she had hailed.
She jnst appeared one day in the
VilBlge. Tradition has- it that her
homeland was Russia.
"It isn't so moch that I'm down and
ouW* she said brdvoly. "It* that tin
Village folks don* coma to see me.
"fee, I know, the Village ia array
?op la MvteceWwtt and Okdfafc
But. they might ind me word or hsg
the farmers. If the weather still stays
dry it seem* all the cdktton will soon
be dpen. -
writer witnessed two funtifala
at OilwUl cdtoetdty August fOtfc. Hbth
die# <? thd da^ of election both Of
Jonesville, one being the widow of
the late- James M. Tweed, former
cqftoh Weigh** of JoilOafffBe. She
lehm to iKBitfh he# dfc?& fh*e*
p?ss??-8SiF?'
Tw*r, tmt- wpr i* t* -1ugwr. ?
hhff A WvxP tbfnWtffr:1
ity end W?** gdBfr MUrNM* H? died
W Mr WHlhday, ugbtf 61. he Jdftiid
. the draMk at 16 and Wed a consistent
fcfre to the eh . Kb MO beeh hi M
health for some time and was ready
when the end came. He leaves a
widow, three sons and three daughters.
Wife and chHdtdhy you Bhoftld
not grieve, but on your heavenly
Father believe. May your loss be
heaven's gain.
Mr. W. Gary White of our common
tty was married on Wednesday of last
week to a Miss Clowney of Columbia.
We extend to them congratulations
and wishes for all the happiness
life can give.
One of the beet barbecues and picnic
dinners of the season was given
at the Heine of Mr. hnd Mrs. L. J.
Gault Tuesday, Sept. 6, this being the
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Gault's
wedding. They were married th$ 3rd
of September 54 years ago. Mr.
Ghttlt is 74 years old and Mn. Gault
is 71, both in very good health. Mr.
Ghult gets about like a man of not
more than 50 yean old. They have
nine lPHng children: J. H. Gault,
Mn. J. D. Charles, Vernon Gault,
Mn. W. It Kelly, Boyd R. Gault, of
Union; Mn. W. I. Going, Mn. S. 11.
Going, of Union, Route 4; Haskcl
'Gault, of Boiling Springs; J. Lee
Gault, of Spartanburg; and 52 grandchildren
and 15 "great grandchildren.
Most of them were present. Very
few families celebrate such a day as
this family does. Something unusual
at such _a. feast was a collection taken
by J. Lee Gault for the Creech Orphanage,
raising $26.00 to provide for
those who are not able to provide for
themselves. This amount was pre.
sented to Rev. Creech by Rev. Golightly,
both of whom were present.
Several invited friends were also present.
We wish Mr. and Mrs. Gault many
yean of happiness. Two that were
present one year ago had departed
this life not to answer the Toll call
here any more. Someone else may go
AVIrifllAW WAOW
OTUV WMVA J VW* UUVU Ill{??)
as this make ma think of the great
reunion that will be up yonder. May
we all live ao as to fill our places
as our heavenly Father would have
4a do. Av L. G.
Osaka Most Eiptnihre City
Osaka, Japan, Aug. 17.?Osaka, the
fhdurftfUft fcapltkl Of fcpafPhhr the
reputation of being the most expensive
city of fie empire in which to J
live. The prices of commodities in (
Osaka in June averaged 8.7 percent
.over the same* month last year, Tokio
the next expensive city, averaged
.6.8 percent. The general advance in
prices in**ten years has been 150.39
percent-hi Osaka and 180JM percent
in Tokio, according to official figures.
Beltevftfi that- the high prices are ,
due to profiteering the government j
recently ordered the department
stores to make a reduction of 15 percent
in necessities. The stores re- |
plied with bargain sales at which
they got x rid of their surplus stock.
' This did not satisfy the government
so an order hits gpne out to all re- |
tailers to reduce the prices of "sobs" ,
a sort of macaroni and "tofu" bean
paste, staple foods of the people. If j
present weather conditions continue
a good crop is expected to bring down
the price of crie. e
Each citizen of the United State*
ihdlM foeSite an artrage of 112
letters each year, according to the
lWil StO* ilflli 1a1>
filRL HAD
FAirirul TIMES 'i
- {
Mothers?Read This Letter
and Statement Which 1
Follows
Portland, Indiana.?'! was troubled I
with irregularity and constipation and ^
1
pains. One Sunday 1
HU myaunt was visiting I
W EL '
nP^S^P^lR <
jilW ^ euewd ibe '(
fflpte lil '
I praise it highly. >
I V" fflffWHYoq are welcome to 'i
dm thia letter *s a testimonial." ~
Stella Newton, R. R. 8, Portland, 1
Indiana.
Mothers?You should carefully gusrd i
your daughter's health. Advise her of
heavy wtidta,' or oMrwcrimq^I>o not 1
let^her oreratody. ^ ^ ^ |
Republican Stronffcold
sJy^aSt^jal any tim* ?v?
th'e past six years. They are putting
particular stress on the congressional
campaifcfth ih all the eight Kansas
iftidtriHe Ih the anticipation that the
JtafaSpB ttpftsentatives in the lower
bouse c^T<congress next year no longer
will bo a so|id Republican delegation.
There is no election of a United
senator in Kthjiat this year.
Both' senator*?Charles Curtis and .
Arthur' Cspp^^hbwe^f, also arei
Republlctos. .The." .last Democratic
*&*>H
Hoclges, I?fl8-Tl5.
In seven of the\?ijtftt Kansas congressional
districts, the Republican
nominees are tti fhnlnbMiil, the one
exception being in the Third where
the veteran congressman, Phil P.
Campbell of Pittsburg was defeated
in the pritnary election, after Serving
nearly 20 years in congress. The defeat
of Campbell by W. H. Sproul was
the outstanding sensation of the Kan
sas primary election and came as a
special blow to Campbell and his
friends in view of the eminent position
he occupies in the national house
as chaii-man of the powerful roles
committee and the further fact that
Campbell has been prominently mentioned
as Republican choice for the
speakership at the next session. This
also adds to the irony of the defeat;
Sproul, a Sedan lawyer, was the opponent.
Campbell defeated 20 years
ago this summer in a bitter contest
for his first nomination, in the Re- .
publican district convention ? four
years befoe the rpresent direct primary
law went Into effect.
In vievfr of the bitterness engendered
in the primary fight, Democrats of y
the Third are counting a lot of Re- ev
publicans among their prospective L
supporters in the congressional race, L
they assert. Authentic reports that v
the Ku Klux Klan in southeastern d
Kansas counties was very largely re- it
sponsible for Congressman Camp- ti
bell's defeat, are passed upon gently h
by Attorney Sproul. "It was the votes o
of the farmers and laboring men that h
put me across," is his version. ti
Intense interest also centers in the o
eighth district. Two years ago W. A.
Ayers, then the only Democratic con- V
gresBman from Kansas, was defeated u
by Richard E. Bird, by a narrow mar- ii
gin. They again are opponents, each o
having been nominated without oppo- a
sition. h
The Second district also promises a t<
spectacular combat. William H. o
Thompson, of Kansas City, Kan., for- r
mer United States senator from Kan- f
sas, has stepped again into the polit- ti
ical harness as Democratic nominee c<
against Congressman Edward C. Lit- R
tie. For the nomination Thompson de- a
fe?ted- <Barton Needham, of Lano, a
state master of the Kansas Grange, a 1
strong farmer organisation. ti
1 *1 e
Raiding in the Mahaud a
Country an Active Vocation ti
Peshawar, India, Sept. 11.?The v
efforts of police and military forces a
lave not yet effected and perceptible tl
decrease in the number of armed o
raids in tne norctiweartern frontier
districts, which occurred, with un- o
usual frequency during the past few 9
months. fi
A late report tells of a bullet bat- tl
tie between a party of police and a a
raiding gang in the Bannu district. I
The police, only eigiht in number,
formed a detachment of a larger *
party which was searching in the 3
Maidangi range of hills for outlaws n
known to be hiding there. This detached
party was ambushed in a de- *l
file by the raiding gan and had two a
of its number killed and its leader ^
severely wounded almost at the first j1
irolley. "
The remaining constables opened v
fire on their attackers at once, al- ^
though without cpver of any sort. ^
Later they withdrew, one by one to d
some water holes about 100 yards ^
away which afforded partial cover. d
Prom this position tbey kept their
opponents at bay for three hours. 9
finally, when ammunition was nearly p
exhausted, the raiders, fearing the ^
arrival of other parties of police aid
pillagers, drew off. This enabled the
police to recover the bodies, arms d
and equipment of their "dead com- fi
rades, and to carry their wounded d
leader to the hospital at Issa Khel, v
where he died the next day, . <*
The tale of sniping incidents, am- a'
bushes and attacks on convoys, which tl
the present occupation of the Mah- ^
lud country has not terminated, is a
long one. Regular troops, with speHalized
training, have not yet been
fcble to overawe the raiders or to tl
prevent them from carrying out their &i
long established location. The raid- c
&rs' chances of success are greatly u
enhanced when they descend to the v
plains after passing unmolested tl
through the area of military occupa- p
tion. In the plains they have to fear t
snly the opposition of partly armed n
HUagers, and pursuit later by such *1
forces of villagers and police' as can h
be hurriedly mobilised. Every ad- tl
rentage lies on the side of "the pur- ?
kued. ? a
Additional forces of police and con- tl
itabulary are now being drafted into *
uie uera ismaii Kuan district, and "
all possible steps are being taken to
confine raiding gangs to their own lj
country by adding to the risks they
must take is coming across the bor- b
ier. *
k
Wild rice, used as a feed for wild s
ooeks and other water foist,la sown 1
npil lullU*U Tffitti 1 iftfWfib iU\ u< a
? u
" r*
usi
" * V\*.
"
Srf- ;
V> i . V
:. . ,5. : ..
J&.
4; AW
w "
I >
si
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-*i< < .Cfc-.
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mmmmmmmmrnrnmrn
atvia at Work
To Croat# Cap
Riga, Latvia, Sept. 8.?It is t
ears since the Paris Pa^ce Coi
nee brought its youngest child,
atvlan Republican into the w
.ike most of its other progeny,
ia is doing well, but is finding li
iffljcu'.t and rigorous one. It kt
; has a long and tortuous roa.
ravel to gain its full stature of si
ood and join the grown-up mem
f the family of nations. JThe pe
ave been immensely heartened
he United States' recent recogn
f the Republic.
Latvia, which is about the siz
Vest Virginia and has a entailer
lation than the city of Fhiladel]
; handicapped by its terrible lc
f life and property durihg the
nd by lack of capital. On the c
and, like all new states, it is ui
cred by precedent and by the cli
f vested interests, and Its hu
aw material is excellent. Long
ore the war the Latvians,
hrough centuries of history were
essively under Swedes, Germans
ussians, had proved their effici
s workers. Their chernital, te
nd metallurgical industrie^and 1
ialtic trade were highly remur
ive. They paid all their own
rnmental expenses, and contrit
large annual surplus to the Rue
reasury.
The manner in which the Lat
olunteer army composed of.fan
nd peasants and led by student
tie Riga Polytechnic Schools, d
ut first the Germans, then the
haviki and finallv the .InnlrA-r ft
f Von der Goltz and Berrm
hows that the Latvians are als<
cient as fighters. In this little :
here is virtually no illiteracy,
11 the people speak three languag
atvian, Russian and German.
The Latvian government is hai
-ork building Utopia on the I
hores of the Baltic. One of its
leasures was to found a universi
:s capital city of Riga; one ol
itest has been to reform its curr
nd to stop the issue of paper mc
'he value of the Latvian ruble
leasured in dollars, is slowly ci
rig up. Exports and imports are
ery nearly balanced. By dint
eavy taxation and wise finance il
een found possible to combine
reased expenditure on educa
ousing and public health with
ral retrenchment.
Ian Chakste, president of the
tituent Assembly of Latvia, has
lained his country's outlook to
orrespondent:
"The Western nations," said
know little about Latvia. The
ot believe in the stability of
ovemment, and they hesitate to
8 money. They even call us Bo
iki. I assure you that DO per
f Latvians hate Bolshevism,
ian propagandists are, of course
ive here, but they make no head
Ve have shot a good many of 1
or spreading their pernicious
rines.
"Our' agrarian policy?the set
ration of large estates and the
tion of small holdings?was hai
riticized, and has no doubt
tuch to give us a bad character,
res tern nations did not uMders
lie situation. Our people were
tWtaely dissatisfied, and right))
hey had been ground down; they
othing. It was a critical mor
he Bolshevik! were ready to p
le anything. We considered it ei
1st to create without delay a com
d community, hard-working, th
nd deaf to political agitators,
herefore, gave the people the 1
ltd they at once settled down to 1
pon it.
' "Trade is improving, but net ri
r. Hundreds of ottr factories
till efc>?*), for we Vwen't the m
0 ve^equt^ them. AgrieuttllM it
Ivinft. The League of Baltic S
1 making iteady progress. The
itfMH-'llitftme bordering o* Ruai
jdftriut. Eathonia, Finland and L
MKt' at! realise that a miMtayj
en*fa? union would, be their bea
> ' #.... .< i'...... ^ *> r
OF LI
^//////// ^ FOR MC
ID IT Wl
"ANDARD O
(NEW J
curity against the Bolsheviki. Perj^j
haps later on Denmark and Sweden
may join us for commercial puhposes.
kreu "We are establishing 'free' ports,
ifer cu^ting away transit duties, revising
tke and reducing our tariffs. We have
orld ^u8sian as a coupon language, but
kat' we need also a common currency and
fe a a network ?* Hght railways to connect
lows us Esthofiia and Lithuania. We
^ to are gradually restoring the devasta_
tion of the Germans, but for all these
bers undertakings ^>e require capital. As
iople ye^ We eannot borrow this, so we are
1 by wor^'nK to create it. That is why wo
ition 'iave no unemployment and no labor
question in I^atvia."
Queen Marie Hopes Soviet
phia, Will Pay for Lost Jewels
>sses _
war Bucharest, Sept. 11.?Queen Maria
ther has been greatly distressed by news
ifet- from Moscow that her magnificent
aims crown jewels, which were taken secima.i
retly to Moscow for safekeeping
' be- when the Germans invaded Buwho
charest in -1916, have been confiscatsuc
ed by the Bolsheviki and subsequent and
ly peddled around Europe. The Bolency
sheviki are said first to have removed
xti'- all the precious stones from the
their jewels, retaining the platinum and
lera- gQid settings.
gov- _ Some of the Queen's gems, togethntei
er xvith those of the late Czar'e
isian crown, are reported to have been
taken to London and disposed of by
'v^an Kameneff in 1920. The Queen has
roer3 despaired of ever recovering these
* ?/ treasures, which were among the
lr9ve most numerous and sumptuous in Eu
rope, but she is hopeful the Soviet
>rcos government may see fit to compenan^t'
sate her for the loss in cash.
* e^" Conflicting versions are in circula3tate
^jon ag 0? Kunianian
a,lt* state funds which were also taken
e8~ to Moscow during the war. Some
consider them non-existent; others
j a say the treasure is intact in the
J vaults of the Kremlin, where it was
rs deposited by the Czarist administrate
its ^ rePort aays that there is
now in Moscow a deposit of 10,070,ency
000 gold rubles belonging to the Ru|ney*
manian treasury, but this is only a
small fraction of the original amount.
When the armistice freed Rumania
from its isolation, the Queen entrustt
has e<^ recoverin& the govem,
jn ment funds and her crown jewels to
,tion bn American gold dredger and soldier
from Nome, Alaska. This man
was said to exercise great influence
Con- w*th the Soviets, but after many ov,
ex_ ertures and much negotiation with
the Moscow he gave up the task of recovering
the treasure as futile.
1 he, # '
y ti0 American Chemical
our Society Meets
lend
lshe- Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 6.?Sea-weed
cent keip, automobile engines, and just
Rus- plain milk were widely different sub,
ac- jects discussed at the opening day of
way. the American Chemical Society conthem
vention now being held here,
doc- On the platform before the delegates,
where usually symphony orjues
chestras perform, a motor engine
-ere. afflicted with 'knocking" played the
rshly chief overture of the day, while chemdone
ists listened, as intently as opera
The lovers do to "Carmen," to the effect
tand of the introduction of a chemical
su- compound, invented by Thomas Mid
r so. f?ley, Jr., and T. A. Boyd, of Dayton,
had on the "knocking" discords,
nent. "Chemicals whose action is simirom
lar -to those known as 'catalysts,'
isen- even if present only in the most mintent
ute quantities," said Mr. Boyd, "can
alimSnota f A A A .> iltA
till v oiiuiiiiavu w a Kicav nif
We, knocking which is most injurious to
land, engines." The gasoline symphony
srork played on cylinders was to prove his
contention.
ipid- Sea-weed kelp, which contains
are iodine and other elements common in
oney sea-water and believed to be benei
re- fleial in preventing goitre, was estates
plained to be a necessary part of the
four diet of . those who live so far inland
liar? as to be deprived of sea food in quanIthu
titles* >'
r de- J. W. Turrentine, whose activities
t as- resulted in the establishment <4 the
'vVvY
THE
BES
JBRICATI
qririe
??HM??^
'///UU/'UW//////////
>TOR LUBRICATION
LL GET I
IL COMPAN
ERSEY)
In Tune ?
The
Progress is the keynote in the
Our eity is growing richer, large
the rhynith of this tune.
And this bank is in tune with
vitally interested in the growth <
because its growth means our gro'
Our City. And we will do all w
deevelopment.
"I,arj?e Enough to Serve Any?Strong
CA^lZl
national.
I LEAD&ZIN<
p ' It mean
P j *T+ 2?u 1 nlm
yx K' 'JSP fl hltf with ?i
\(\s yr~m ^ Devoe e
\ ^ If not. w*'l
bout*.
D*vo* Pro
* b*ck*d by
B (B/B^M^^B fl^P eldMt pair
8. Pot
a <\wW
Vb Ston
H jjjSH j^^B GoodSi
f^Bfl^B flH5?B|Kj
iKl^H "BNttfiKtfi^B ^ Tire*
A ^ B^^^Tubr*
kelp industry on the Pacific coast, in- Nt
troduced the sea-week kelp in its new in f;
role to the chemists. "The new niinir
i form," he said, "admits of cheaper main
preparation and preservation, and is Nort
easily available for the afflicted peo- and
pie of all countries." Find
Housewives' uncertainty as to the the r
youth or age of the contents of the anim
bottle found with the newspaper on The
the porch each morning is the rea- in an
Ann fnv fhn nrAminoni norf rtf ?V% 11I* Hnlu
in yesterday's meeting- "Methylene tion
blue," a dye, is cleverer and more the j
sure than the nose in detecting the Mb
age of milk," said Minnie F. Dress- breec
lar, who demonstrated the action of ory (
the dye in discoloring old milk and 'cn "
remaining perfectly clear in new.
Seven other dyes may be used with I
equal success, the scientists say. I
Sweden Adopting ,
American Motor Car* I
Stockholm, Sept. 11.?Sweden to- P
day counts 40,000 automobiles, aci
cording to recent statistics, double
the number in use two years ago. ^ ^
1 Stockholm alone has 5,000 cars.
Swedish farmers, formerly hostile to
1 the invasion, have become reconciled gei
1 and are buying cars. Much of the i. ^
gasoline and an overwhelming ma>
jority of the cars come from the *
United States. 991
T
ON
t
IT!
IT
vith
Times
tune of these times,
r, more beautiful, to
the times. We are
of the city?not only
vvth, but because it is
e can to promote its
: Enough to Protect All"
LNv5
BANK?
: PAINT I
e Guarantee: B
is actual cash in your B
to take advantage of Sj
half your house with Devoe
id Zinc Paint: paint the other ol
r?y other pa.nt you choose. W
loesn't take fewer khIIoos and Km
rioney we will make no charge H
lesn't wear a year or two or three
T ?longer end better?we will
noueh Devne to Hn lh? irtK ni-?r ?
lalf your house lead-and-oil; the
Devoe. In three years the leadf
will be hungry for more paint.
9 still sound
I give you enough for the whole
ducts are time-tested and proven,
the 16S years' experience of the
it manufacturing concern in the
inded 1754.
e Hardware Co.
Union, S. C.
'a;* the Yukon border, in a valley
ir northern British Columbia, a
iK engineer has discovered the res
of mastodons that once roamed
hern Canada. This valley is north
west of the headwaters of the
lay river and is not marked on
naps. Footprints of a three-toed
al are imprinted in the sandstone,
bones are not fossilized but are
i excellent state of preservation,
dog teams are used in that seeand
is requires a year to make
journey.
neteen species of shoe birds
I north of the Arctic Circle, ev>ne
of which visits South Ameri
Winter.
When You Feel
Shaky
Mm* Ml 11 TV Frur SOvMira
nost successful remedy for
ilaritl fevers end e reliable
leral invigorating Tonic,
will help to keep you well.
M.mm* Mtdbjr iMr JmnM, writ*