Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Nov 1919, p. 3.

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

in nl ' M lid HE national parks will probably soon stage a contest In scenic loveliness between Yosemite valley and 5Zion canon. For the bill creating J A Zion canon a national park has l/' been passed by both houses of con- ' gress and at this writing is in conference over an amendment. Callfornlans--always the best of boosters--have long contended that Yosemite valley Is the su- JlBeine expression at scenic loveliness. They held Uiat there is nothing like it on earth. To them it is "the valley whose compelling beauty the world Acknowledges as supreme." But Utah enthuaflasts believe that when Zion's beauty is known to (the public Yosemite will be put in the second >rank. Of course the new Zion National park will [hardly rank with Yosemite as a national park, 'for the latter contains 719,622 acres, while the tformer will have only 76,800 acres. But the contest in loveliness between Yosemite valley und fZlon canon is likely to be close and Interring, Yellowstone National park in Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, as everybody knows, was the first national park to be established W872) in the world. It is our oldest and largest and moat famous scenic natural park. Its geysers and hears have made Its name, a worldwide household word, ^tosemite in California, established in 1890, to •earcely less famous; all the world knows of*Its •waterfalls and its big trees--the oldest and largest living things in the world. And Yosemite ivalley, its greatest beauty, is familiar to everyone through pictures. It is visited yearly by thousands; this season the attendance was 58,564. . The proposed Zion National park lies in southern Utah, about 200 miles south of Salt City. The state has made It accessible to the tourist by building 100 miles of automobile highly from Lund on the Salt Lake route. The Arrowhead trail from Salt Lake City- is also available. President Taft in 1909 created the Munkuntuweap national monument of 15,840 acres to preserve the wonderfully scenic area of the canon of the Rio Virgin. In recent years other scenic canons were discovered, and in 1918 President Wilson enlarged the national monument to 78,800 acres and changed its name to Zion. In the debate over the Zion National park bill in the house Representative Welling of Utah said In part: "This region obtained Its name Zion canon because of the devout reverence of the Mornraa pioneers who settled upon the Virgin river more than 60 years ago. Its perpendicular walls presented an impassable barrier to hostile tribes of Indians, who infested these "regions, and these people looked upon Zion canon as a convenient and hospitable refuge when threatened by attack from these troublesome Indian tribes. Zion eanon is an extraordinary gorge cut from brilliantly colored sedimentary rocks by the north fork of the Virgin river. Its proportions are about equal to those of Yosemite valley, in Yosemite National park; the walls are several hundred feet lower and the canon is considerably narrower. In the cutting of the gorge, however, "th® torrential stream and wind and rain have carved domes, spires, towers, and other curious forms that strikingly resemble many of the features of Yosemite valley. "More interesting than the carving of Zion's cliffs is their exquisite coloring. Red predominates, as It does in the Grand canon in Arizona, t>ut there are amazing combinations of brown, •black, and white colors with the red and with cadi other. White sandstone is superimposed on the red strata, and other layers of the red rock " lie In turn upon the white. The action of water upon the exposed surfaces of these rocks has produced a Rymphony of color that gives the canon its greatest charm. TJte finishing touches are given by the forests of the valley floor and the trees on the rim and in the niches of the ^ nearly perpendicular canon walls." , - r Until recently Zion has been practically Inaccessible, and scarcely tens have seen It whefo" thousands have seen Yosemite. But Zion's vl*b i tors have paid eloquent tribute. The Indians -called it MunkuntUwenp-^Land of Ood--because It was so beautiful. The fierce Mormon zealot named it "Little Zion" because; of its heavenly beauty.^ Away back in the seventies John Wesley Powell of Grand canon fame was tempted far (Hit of his way by jthe 'exceeding beauty of a temple ofIrock "lifting Jfe opalescent shoulders against the eastern sky." It was the vermilion body and shining white dome of the West Temple of OW) Virgin at tbT Entrance to iMtmkuntuweap. "Again we are ln^pressed with the marvelous * beauty of outline, • the infinite complication of J these titanic buttes. It is doubtful if in this respect the valley has Its equal. Not even thf* Grand canon offers a more varied spectacle; yet all Is welded together in a superb ensemble." F. 8. Dellenbaugh, topographer of the Powell party, wrote this on his second visit. "Nothing can exceed the wondrous beauty of Zion canon," wrote C. E. Dutton. "In its proportions It is about equal to Yosemite, but in the nobility and beauty of Its sculptures there is "ft comparison. It Is Hyperion to a Satyr." , * -- - •' tzar tmtEifaimzAiK&s Jack Lalt wrote a characteristic appreciation of Zion canon for a railroad" administration booklet, in which he said: "Zion eanon iif an epic, written by Mother Nature in her most ecstatic humor, illustrated by Creation in its most majestic manifestations, published by God Almighty as an inspiration to all mankipd. Zion canon Is the most beautiful spot on this continent. I think I have seen all the famed show-places that the evolution of the earth's formation has made. And of them all Zion to me stands first, stands alone." Zion has the double charm of form and color, and It Is hard to say which is the more appealing. ' The entrance to the canon is spacious and impressive. The course up the Rio Virgin is tortuous and the variation of view and of formation of the lofty walls is great. At the end of six or seven miles of canon the wall narrows to the stream. What there Is beyond is practically unknown. Thus from the plateau above the visitor may look down thousands of vertical feet into the painted canon with its river. From the river bank he may look up thousands of feet with a changing view at every turn of the canon. The entrance to the canon is most impressive. To the west rises the West Temple (7,650 feet), flanked by the Towers of the Virgin. The guar- - dlan to the east is the East Temple (7.000), ... flanked by the Watchman (6,350). and Bridge mountain (6,650). Then come the Streaked Wall on the west side and the Brown Wall on the east side, topped respectively by the Three Patriarchs and the Mountain of the Sun. Extraordinary fen-' tures of the wall formation Include El Goberna-' dor, the Great Organ and the Temple of Slnawava. The visitor finally comes to a point where the chasm is more than 2,000 feet deep and the walls so nearly touch that he looks up to see no sky. The walls are practically vertical and parallel and warp In and out, thus cutting off the blue above. Here is revealed the secret of the Making of ,Zion, as Is pointed out by Dr. G. K. Gilbert of the United States geological survey. This chasm is an example of downward erosion by sand-bearing water, which acts like the marble saw. The cut is not entirely vertical, because the current has carried the cutting sand to one side or the other and the cut undulates both la Its vertical and' horizontal sections. : The forms along the canon walls are extraordinary. And the colors are even more striking The famous Vermilion Cliff of. the Painted Desert here combines with the White Cliff and we see a thousand feet of white superimposed on two thousand feet of red. But this startling combination is but the beginning of a veritable riot of color. The Vermilion Cliff rests on the Painted " Desert stratum--350 feet of a deeper red set off - by purple and mauve shales. Below this is a hundred feet of brown and gray conglomerate. The Crowning touch is the coloring of the upper summits of the White Cliff. Here there are In places , several hundred feet of varicolored shales and llriiestones whose seepage fantastically stains the , glistening white. In consequence of the meeting jfof these many colors Zion is as gorgeous as a Gypsy scarf, and sunrise and sunset produce unbelievable effects. For fxample.^ake the West Temple. From a foundation of mingled red% yellows, browns. grays and purples it rises ab ruptl.v 4.000 feet. The body a brilliant red. The upper third Is white. The huge mass is so perfect in conformation that suggests the work of a titan architect. And on top of the lofty central rectangle rests squared cap of red above the glistening white. Across the cannon, and slightly to the north, rising between two peaks of deepest umber looms the great silvery dome of the Eastern Temple, clothed In colorings like to its western sister. This rounds to a broad summit upon which is mounted a symmetrical cap of that same beautiful bloodlike sandstone formation. Just beyond the East and West Temples are Ctnged three cone-shaped mountains, wildly rug gfcd in their outlines and facing another court of totally different fype from that which fronts the Western Temple. Here again has Bible history contributed the titles, for the three peaks are known as the "The Patriarchs" and the space at their base the "Court 6f the Patriarchs." A little farther on Is another trio which occu pies the eastern wall. Of decidedly different formation and coloring, they are called "Three Brothers." A great white dome Is known as the "Mountain of the Sun." Here the breaks In both canon wialls have brought about a most Interesting ef feet, for this beautiful mountain catches the first glint of the rising and receives the last kiss of the setting sun. Still another feature of the "Mountain of the Sun" is the tint of the afterglow . / that changes its chalky summit Into a rosy dome. | Many intersecting canons and the tortuous course of the main canon give great variety to the formations. Possibly El Gobernador Is the gem of them all? Standing at a turn of the canon, its mighty mass rises sheer 3,000 feet from .the creek that skirts Its base, this pile presents a picture unsurpassed. Gray at its base, it clears to glistening white with a summit that terminates in a great table. Far up on one of Its faces there hangs a wonderful natural bridge, the top of Which has never been pressed by the foot of man fc;V ViBeyond 'El Gobernador the canon twists and > turns until it widens out into the most weird of all its bizarre features. This is the "Great Tern pie of Slnawava," which occupies a vast amphl theater shut In by wals of brilliantly colored rock towering 2,000 feet above its floor. Here the rippling creek horseshoes around a most remark ably formed sandstone object that closely resent 'tfles a Buddha seated on his throne. Legend has given this place as the locality where the prehistoric people of this southwestern land gathered to do reverence to Slnawava, their ruling deity The place fills the bill. If ever there was a spot where weirdly mystic incantations and wildly Impressive ceremonials would seem to accurately j^t into the surroundings, it is this same rock Wund pocket in the depths of Zion. Just beyond the prehistoric temple the canon enters Its narrows until the creek occupies every foot of the floor and feathery waterfalls dash down from moss and lichen covered terraces. As If these were not enough. It Is known that there are other beauties possibly of even more wonderful quality. Secretary Lane of the In- . terlor department, In recommending the bill, wrote: Ml have dwelt particularly upon Zion canon because it is now so readily accessible and because 4t Is actually being used as a tourist resort, but there are other canons In the reservation that are bigger and even more beautifully colored. 8tlU more remain to be entered and explored. In time they will all be open to the public. Furthermore, there are in the reservation mountains, waterfalls, natural bridges, ancient cliff dwellings, and numerous other features interesting to the tourist and exceedingly valuable to the scientist and student." Yosemite the. Beautiful apparently must look . to lts laurels. F CONDENSATIONS .v.4)he most perfect pearls are round. Nest comes the pear-Shaped, and taatfcr the egg-shaped. Ital7 has only one-third as many telephones in proportion to population as France and only slightly more tt.an on^-sixth as many as Great Britain. Combined with a compact electHc room heater that can be screwed Into a light socket Is a tiny ten to drive the warmed air downward toward the The escapement wheel qf a watch makes 781,800 revolutions every 12 months. Belgium has lone bad the distinction of being the only maritime conntry in Europe without a navy. The Kongo river and its tributaries provide more than 9,000 miles of waterways navigable to steamboats • of shallow draft. Seaweeds obtain their nourishment from the water In which they grow, not from the ground in which'they may be rooted. Scientists have demonstrated that nearly 50 per cent of our bodily ills result from mental worries. The law In Switzerland protecting rare plants Is so strict that to be found in possession of specimens Illegitimately collected Is a penal offense. Dark-haired people, says an authority, get married sooner than falr-naired individual?. He has shown by statistics that an overwhelming majority of those women who live and die spinsters have fair hair. JIUCH IN LITTLE What Js claimed to be the world's largest gasoline motor fire engine has been placed in service at Louisville. Ky. A shock absorbing wheel of English Inventon has a hub partly filled with steel balls; which share thi road jolts. Lincoln--Lack of coal forced suspens^ rn of street railway lines in Lin- Coin. SpringfieM.^-Covernor Lowden has appointed Judge A. J. Clarity, Republican, Freeport, chairman of the state tourt of claims to succeed Judge Ralph Eaton, Mount Carroll, resigned. Monmouth.--Failure to properly <11- agnose smallpox cases here has resulted in an epidemic of the disease. Afflicted persons thought they had chickenpox. Many residents have been exposed, and a further spread of the plague is feared. Twenty cases of smallpox have thus far been reported. Pershing.--The opening of Mine 15 of the Old Ben Coal company, at the new townsite of Pershing, gives this company eight modern colleries In Franklin county--two at West Frankfort. one at Huckner, three at Christopher, one at Sesser and one at Pershing-- aqd also brings the number of mines in the county up to 24. Aurora.--This city has decided to establish a court of domestic relations. Women engaged in sociological work have engaged lawyers to make a report upon the necessary legal steps, and the project has been Indorsed by the Community Welfare association and the police department and philanthropic organizations. Carbondale.--A record in the percentage of attendance was made by the public schools here last month, according to Prof. A.' R. Boone, superintendent of schools. The report showed that an attendance in the igrades of 97 per cent was recorded, eing higher than the high school, which was 05 per cent. Aurora.--Life insurance companies subject physicians to too much red tape In making out the "proofs of death" required before payment of policies, according to Dr, Clifford Collins of Peoria, who In an address to Kane county physicians said some action on the subject probably would be taken at the next meeting of the State Medical society. j St. Louis, Mo.--National officers of the W. C. T. U. were re-elected here a few days ago, Including Miss Anna A. Gordon, Evanston, 111. Other officers are: Vice president, Mrs. ' Ella A. Boole, New York; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Frances C. Parks, Evanston ; recording secretary, Mrs. Elizabeth P. Anderson, Fargo, N. D.; treasurer, Mrs. Margaret MuUns, Evanston. Chicago.--A number of large Industries In Chicago and vicinity announced that unless they receive coal they will be forced to shut down their plants In whole or In part within a few days. At the same time, George W. Reed of the regional coal committee announced that there was no hope for any but essential industries of the first five classes In priority list receiving any coal now on the tracks of the railroads. Aurora.--A fixed determination to restrict In the future the representation in the legislature of Chicago or any other densely populated district developed at a meeting her of northern Illinois downstate Republican delegates to the constitutional convention. The delegates also were opposed unanimously to the present minority representative act which alms to prevent a dominant political party in a district electing all the members of the legislature from the district. Jonesboro.--The first annual "pigclub" show of the county was held here. Forty-seven purebred pigs were entered that weighed from 200 to 305 pounds each. They were March and April pigs, and Svere distributed to members June 7, 1919. The prizes distributed amounted to $248.50 besides numerous other articles contributed by merchants. The show was a grand success and attracted stockmen from all parts of the county. Springfield.--There will be but 17 Democrats sitting in the constitutional convention which meets in this city next January to draw up a new constitution for submission to the voters. Official returns received at the secretary of state's office of the election of November 4 show 85 Republicans and 17 Democrats elected. The Labor party, which had candidates In most of the districts of (he state, failed to elect a delegate. Tabulation in the secretary of state's enffice on the three propositions of Instruction to the members of the constitutional convention show that they carried by the following votes Initiative and Referendum-- For, 257.640; against, 209,348; majority, for, 48.292. Gateway--For, 242.519; against, 205.30G: majority, for, 37,212. Authorizing cities to exceed the constitutional limit of bonded indebtedness in order to purchase utilities--For, 257,753; against, 197,- 135; majority, for 60 618. Sterling.--Organization of a basket ball league to include the towns of Sterling. Rock Falls, Dixon, Ilochelle, 'olo, Lanark, Mount Carroll, Mount Morris, Galena and Savannah, is under way.' Chicago.--Chicago remains dry-- legally dry. Federal Judge George A. Carpenter upheld congress iu all Its liquor regulations, and dismissed the Hannah & Hogg petition to restrain dry law enforcement Judge Louis Fitzhenry, considering the same motions made by wet leaders of Peoria, announced he concur* In every phase of the Chicago edict. / O'Fallon.--At the Sfl Clair County Farmers' institute here, resolutions were adopted commending acting President John L. Lewis of the United Mine j Workers In rescinding the strike order ' and condemning all strikes as Inimical | to public welfare. The resolution calls ; upon congress and the state leglsla- I tures to work out soaie plan, practical and just to all concerned, of putting an end -to ail strikes. In the same resolution the institute heartily indorses High speed telegraph apparatus of the work of the Illinois Agricultural English invention can be made to de- association and commends the move liver typewritten messages at a speed 1 to form a national farmers' organlsaof 120 words a nilnntB I SI nil men will be transferred to Kelly aviation field, at San Antonio, Tex. Dixon.--What is said to be a ne\r record for Lee county farm land dis* posed of at a master ic chancery's sal# was established when the Lang farm of 155 acres sold for $386 an acre. Springfield.--"Farmers of Illinois ara deep in their harvest of a 300,000,000 bushel corn crop," says a state crop report, just issued. "In nearly every field shuckers are at woVk picking the golden grain from the rustling stalk*. This year's crop will add aproximately $435,000,000 to the agricultural wealth of the commonwealth. Urbana.--The Hessian fly infestation this fall is the heaviest since the fall of 1915, and will cause considerable Injury to the wheat crop of Illinois this year, according to a statement of State Entomologist W. P. Flint issued at the University of Illinois. Mount Vernon.--A local meat market man stated that no turkeys have been offered him for sale, and that he knows of none to be obtained in the country. A local commissionhouse manager says there are no turkeys in this county, and that all received. here by the house were shipped in. Springfield.---Secretary of State Emuierson has forwarded to county clerks of the state license applications and registration blanks for motor vehicle licenses for 1920. The new law. which becomes effective January 1, provides for a broader classification of vehicles and for the registration of tractors used for hauling purposes. St. Charles.--Having put up for winter use 600 gallons of tomatoes, 1,000 gallons of pumpkin, 500 gallons of pickles, 500 gallons of chili sauce and 50 gallons of beet sirup, the State School for Boys is preparing to market its harvest of sugar beets. About seventy tons per acre will be the yield, which will bring about ten dollars per ton. Springfield. -- "Illinois has made greater strides than any state In the Union In the treatment of her tubercular patients," declared Dr. George Thomas Palmer, president of the Illinois Tuberculosis association, at a state tuberculosis conference recently held here. Doctor Palmer urged the erection of county sanatoria for the eleemosynary treatment of "white plague" patients. Chicago.--Illinois delegates to the Minneapolis convention of the American Legion returned with the announcement that the Illinois legion would organize an Americanization committee of vigilantes to detect radicalism of all types. "We are determined that there shall be no repetition of the Centralia tragedy in this state," said Col. Milton J. Foreman, Illinois commander. Springfield.--Installation of officers marked the closing of the 1919 convention of the grand lodge of I. O. O. F. The Rehekah state assembly installed the following officers whose election was announced: Mrs. Ida Sherman, Rogers Park, president; Mrs. Alice Trees, Peoria, vice president ; Mrs. May Crowell, Rockford, secretary; Mrs. Emma F. Turner, Cambridge, treasurer; Mrs. Nellie Thompson, Kankakee, warden. Springfield.--"Thrift week" begins In Illinois January 17 and closes January 24, says an announcement by the Illinois Bankers' association. Each day of the week will be set aside for special observance of thrift. There will he a "Bank day," "Life Insurance day," "Own Your Own Home day,** "Make a Will day," and other thrift slogan days, intended to point out the need for recognizing general thritf to-, ward the end the slogans suggest. Sunday, January 18, will be "Thrift Sunt day," when pastors of churches throughout the state will urge thrift in sermons from the pulpit. Springfield.--Governor Lowden has named the state housing commission, who will prepare a state housing code, a building code and a zoning bill and submit it to the next general assent* by for ratification. State Senator Harold Kesslnger of Aurora, who Introduced the bill creating the commission in the last general assembly, WHS made chairman of the commission. Other members are: State Senator Willett Ijl. Cornwell, Chicago; Representatives Gotthard A. Dahlberg, Chicago ; and Horace W. McDavld, Decatur; Charles W. Hammond, Andrew Landqulst and Robert Knight of Chicago. « • Springfield.--State health officials are taking an alarming view of the increasing spread of contagious diseases in Illinois. For the week ending No-. veinlHT 17. 446 cases of diphtheria were reported in the state. 296 cases of scarlet fever, 68 of smallpox, 43* of typhoid fever and 57 of Influenza. Doctor Drake, state director of health, lays the blame on Impromper diagnosis. "Our early cases of smallpox wer mild In character, but more recent-" ly they show a marked tendency to become virulent, a number of the confluent type, or black smallpox, cases being reported within the last week, he said. Carbondale.--The water supply here has been found polluted. State health officials are investigating. Chicago.--Fourteen deaths from the use of denatured alcohol as a substitute for whisky have been reported to tlie coroner's office since September 15. At a conference in the office of Health Commissioner Robertson on ways to curb the sale of alcohol for drinking purposes. Miss Dorothy Blatchford, secretary for the Society for the Prevention of Blindness, told of numerous cases of blindness reported to the organization attributable to "alcoholU Jags." Chicago.--Middlemen add to the high post of living. Remove them. This was the slogan of the meeting of the Illinois Agricultural society, which met here recently and formed a national organization of farmers to curb both labor and capital when they transgress the rights of the public. D. O. Thompson, secretary of the Illinois Agricultural society urged the removal of the middlemen. The problem of providing better marketing facilities was discussed. Fair price to the farmer and fair price to the consumer was suggested as one means of reducing the of living. • • • • i f r ' j..is&i,- ' A. - . a . THE MCHENRY PLAINDEALEB, MCHENRY, ILL. ir't •»_s, r • M I I I U H M M M H I I U M M I Rnntonl.--Chanute fleld has been closed by the war department. All its t* ILLINOIS ji •! •I State News I; k? ¥--'W*2 M I I I I I H H I M I I M JoKrv Dickinsorv Skeruva-rvi < 0 ' N now iS, CNatrntyhm • !? (•M lal «H in tftoon. XftlMtl 0lvi Cliff oo ti* #700 WYUECAMI* \c A* 7000 H. S60 '! WlttTimpIt % N«Wr«4 B<Mgt r«»o it. HOW MRS. BOYD AVOIDED AN OPEBATIOB Canton, Ohio.--"I suffered from a female trouble which caused me mueh suffering, and tsro doctors decided that I would have to go through aa operation before I. could get welL "My mother, had been helped fey LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Coaspound, advised ma to try it before submitting to an opei^ tion. It relieved m T , from my trouble. •?_* can do my house work without any difficulty. I advise any woman whola afflicted with female troubles to giro Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coin, pound a trial and it will do as much fop them."--Mrs. MARIE BOYD, 1421 Stfe St., N. E., Canton, Ohio. Sometimes there are serious eondh Hons where a hospital operation is tlka only alternative, but on the other haad ao many women have been cared by this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia EL Pir.kham's Vegetable Compound, after doctors hove said that an operation was necessary -- every woman who wants to avoid an operation should give it ft fair trial before submitting to roch ft trying ordeal. If complications exist, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Maasi^ for advice. The result of many yea|i experience is at your service. Illiterature. "Slang seems to sell well." "Yeah. The thing now is to to literary." Cuticura Soothes Baby Rashea. That itch and burn with hot batla of Cuticura Soap followed by gentlt anointings of Cuticura Ointment Nothing better, purer, sweeter, especially If a little of the fragrant Cutl» cura Talcum Is dusted on at the Afe lab. 25c each everywhere.--Adv. A good dinner will make some act almost human. SOLD MUST BE TRIED BY FIRS, Gold is tried by fire, and a remedy la tried in the fires of critical health conditions. Last winter, with its enor» mous death rate, was a real ordeal by , fire. Triner's American Elixir of Blft* ter Wine stood the test victoriously and won many new friends. By keep. Ing the Intestines clean, this remedy beats the bacteria out of the field; there Is not the remotest chance of their nestling in the intestinal tracts and so your body is able to defy dia» 2ases. And Triner's Angelica Bitter Tonic Is another excellent remedy. Mr. Ant Klement says In his letter date# Addy, Wash., Nov. 1, 1919: "Tour remedies, Triner's American Elixir o£ Bitter Wine and Triner's Angelica Bitter Tonic, work miracles. Two bofc*2 ties have saved my daughter, and wheft I gave it to my neighbor who had been sick for years, he came, after two days, full of joy that he slept be^ ter and that his appetite had improve^ and asked me to write at once for thfc remedy to Spokane." You will gel these remedies at your druggist's.--*. Joseph Trlner Company, 1833-43 Ashland Ave„ Chicago, 111.--Adv. A woman's pronunciation of depends upon her station In ilte. ASPIRIN FOR COLDS "Bayer" is on Aspirin--say Bayer 3 Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin* ^ % In a "Bayer package."containing proper directions for Colds, Pain, Head1* jj|| ache. Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheu» * ^ matlsm. Name "Bayer" means genuine 4 v,-. Aspirin prescribed by physicians for • $ nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of lSfc. J| tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mono* acetlcacldester of Salicylicacid.--Adv. Carried men are nearly all great Inventors--of excuses. TORPEDOED!) Don't blast your Uver and Bowels, but t*fca- "Cascarets." You men and women who can't get feeling right--who have headache, coated tongue, bad taste and foul breath, dizziness, can't sleep, are bilious, nervous and upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stomach and colds. Are you keeping your liver and bow- ^ ^ els clean with Cascarets, or shocklni •your Insldes every few days with Calr omel. Salts, Oil and violent pillsT Cascarets work while you sleep; thej t cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, ^ undigested, fermenting food and foul | gases; take the excess bile from the ^ liver and carry out of the system allthe constipated waste matter and pot* i son In the bowels. Cascarets nevet *; gripe, sicken or pause Inconvenience - and Cascarets cost so little too.--Adhfc. A new baby airplane of Swedist make weighs only TOO pounds, and bat y a speed of 80 miles an hour. Stop Your Coughing No need to let that cou^b petw*. ttsptlM Irritation, utd bcUiif aad ncaa by aootMoa tfe* ill tkmt

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy