Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Nov 1925, p. 2

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

MdiJ&hljfclU ' JPEiPf» f Wit: h..^ $;i£tf.• • > r; *i „- t- <-•' v*r« I PRESIDENT COOLIDGE ACTS IN FARM CRISIS Big Corn Crop and Grain Gambier* Coom of Iowa Bamk Wrtliitigton.--Corn fartne^rtre facing a crlals doe to a smash In prices to 50 cent* a bushel on the farm, and unless quick steps are taken by the government to remedy the situation, bank failures In the Middle West will Increase, it la reported In Washington. The warning was sounded by Senator Henrlckr, Shlpstead of Minnesota Upon receipt Of news that President Ooolidge had dispatched Nils Olson of the Department of Agriculture and Albert C. Williams of the farm loan board to Iowa and other corn-producing states to get the facts. Bank failures are becoming frequent in the corn belt. In one Iowa district alone Ave banks went to the wall In a week. The corn crisis arises Just after the discharge by President Coolldge of his agricultural commission on the ground that ail the remedies recommended by tt had been pat Into effect except the oo-operatlve market provisions. , President Coolldge Is taking Instant action to help the corn belt farmers In their crisis. This year's corn crop Is estimated by the Department of Agriculture at 8,000,000,000 bushels, as compared with 2,500,000,000 last year. The Increase Is given as one reason for the unexpected decline, which bas prevented some farmers from meeting their obligations to the banks. Short selling in the grain exchanges by gamblers, who want to profit by the farmers' hardships. Senator Shlpstead believes, also Is a factor. That legislation to help the farmers will be pressed bas been Indicated by the announcement of Secretary of Agriculture Jardine that a bill to encourage co-operative marketing * associations will be Introduced In the coming congress. JProbeof Ncdion-Wide Rum Plot Is Under Way St. Paul, Minn.--The St. Paul Pioneer- Press says that five agents of tbe United States Treasury department have been In St. Panl for more than five weeks investigating alleged Uqnor conspiracies. The probe, the newspaper says, is part of a nationwide Investigation of a gigantic liquordistributing system extending from Philadelphia to St Panl. Federal Inqalriea are being made in other cities. Including Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland and Philadelphia. Eventually 100 Indictments on conspiracy and bribery charges will be sought before a federal grand jury, according to the Pioneerl'resfc. Five Women Found Dead; Suspect Poison in Wine Bibbing, Mont.--Five women are dead as the result of poisoning or asphyxiation. A gas Jet fonnd open in the kitchen of the home of one of them is believed to have caused the death, although a coroner's inquest has been called to determine if wine, contained in small glasses, found before each of them, contained poison. The dead are: Mrs. Elis Knuislsto, thirty-five; Mrs. Ida Hardy, thirty-five years old, her tenant; Mary Herzzing, twenty-five years old; Mrs. Mary Ernatinger, thirty-five years old; Katherine Green, twenty-five years old. GEORGIA'S GOVERNOR An especially posed portrait Gov. Clifford Walker of Georgia. of BROADCASTERS FAVOR CONTROL OF AIRWAYS Say Numerous Stations Threaten Existence of Radio. Two Boys, Two Girls Killed When Auto Is Hit by Train Kalamazoo, Mich.--William Stevens, sixteen; Harold Garrett, seventeen; Delia Miller, fourteen, and Louise Wagner, fourteen, were killed when the . closed car in-which they were riding was struck by a tralh on the Michigan Central railroad at Douglas aventiie here. The automobile was struck broadside, carried about 200 feet and toppled over an embankment 20 feet It tl.en caught fire, the flames charring the body of Miss Miller before firemen" who were called could rescue it from the tangled wreckage. *Rum Ships Off New Yorkj Coast Guard Is Active New York.--Fourteen ships are hovering along rum row, the New York World saj's, with cargoes of Ilqnor for the holiday trade. Skippers of incoming vessels have told of renewed activities off the Long Island and New Jersey coasts, where last summer the coast guard reported the imaginary line of cheer had been cleared of its floating warehouses. l^^JTour new liquor ships have been reported in the coastal vicinity of Bos- ( ton. Others have been sighted hovering off the southern coast. 'Washington.--Completely reversing its attitude of a year ago, the National Association of Broadcasters at a meeting here preliminary to the fourth national radio conference, under the auspices of the Department of Commerce, adopted a resolution recommending legislation .which wHI vest foil authority over the issuance of broadcasting licenses In the secretary of commerce. The association also adopted •resolutions urging that in any legislation en the subject the test of the broadcasting privilege be based upon the "needs of the public served; that the copyright law be amended to fix a reasonable fee for the broadcasting of compositions, and that there be no limitations on bcoadcasting of advertising. Radio broadcasting may soon cease, declared Paul B. Klugh, executive chairman of the association. In an address to its membership. "Broadcasting is menaced from two directions and either danger is powerful enough to destroy the present service to the public. The rapidity with which broadcasting stations are multiplying and the congestion of the air wlli soon make successful broadcasting a physical impossibility for any one." "Governmental control on a basis of limitation is the only thing that can save broadcasting fro mhopeless chaos that can only end in suspension of the service to millions of people throughout the country." The association also adopted a resolution for presentation to the Hoover conference which declares against the licensing of more stations for the reason that the saturation point has been reached. Jury Ready to Try Father Who Killed "Human Husk" Littleton, Colo.--Word pictures of Hazel Blazer--described by the defense as a human husk without a soul, and by the prosecution as a spark of humanity--were painted in court as the state begun introducing evidence In an effort to convict Dr. Hurold Elmer Blazer on a charge of murderlug his daughter. The completion of the Jury to try the aged physician was effected with startling suddenness and the prosecution plunged ahead with the presentation of witnesses. Here are some of the descriptions offered by the witnesses of thq "thing" that Doctor Blazer slew: Dr. W. S. Dennis, who performed an autopsy on the body of the girl: A female, probably over thirty yeara of age, about four feet In height and weighing around ninety pounds. She was fairly well developed from the waist up, but the under development of the lower limbs was marked." Roy Bishop, son-in-law of the defendant : e "A scrap of breathing flesh, unable to feed, clothe herself, or otherwise care for her personal needs. She was absolutely helpless any dependent oo Doctor Blazer alone." HOUSE BODY VOTES v INCOME TAXES SECRET Names to Be Made Public, bed Amount Paid Will |*t._ Withheld, Washington.--Repeal of the publicity provision of the revenue law waa approved by the house ways and means committee. The action was taken by Republicans and Democrats In working out wbat promises to be a nonpartisan tax measure. As amended the provision would require lists of names, of taxpayers to be made available to public Inspection, but without the amounts of tax paid, as undd-- the present law. The committee retained the provision of the present law giving the house ways and means committee, the senate finance committee and special congressional committees the right to call on the treasury to furnish original tax returns. The committee voted not to repeal the federal estate tax, but instead to reduce the maximum rdte from 40 to 20 per cent and to increase from 26 to 80 per cent of the federal tax the credit given in the payment of state Inheritance tafea. While the treasury met defeat <i> the proposal to repeal the state tax. It won Its recommendation for the repeal of the gift tax. In lieu of the gift tax It was voted to amend the estate tax provisions so that property conveyed within two years of the death of the testator without consideration therefor should be Included within the property of the estate for the purpose of assessing the tax. The committee voted to retain tbc $50,000 estate tax exemption of the present law. The maximum rate <>f 20 per cent will apply above $10,000,- 000, which is the top bracket of the present schedule. The lower brackets remain to be worked out by a subcommittee. The committee acted on corporation taxes, rejecting proposals to repeal the capital stock'tax and modify the 12% per cent tax on corporation earnings. The present $10,000 limit on the 25 per cent credit for earned income was increased to $20,00Gk this action meaning a loss In revenue of about $7,000,- 000. It was estimated that the cats In normal taxes to 1%, 8 and 5 per cent and the cut In surtax maximum to 20 per cent, together with the Increase In personal exemptions to $2,500 and $3,500 and the action on earned Income would mean an aggregate loss In revenue of from $11)0,000,000 to $195,000,00o. The committee now hns acted on sll tax rates except those relatmg to excise taxes. These will be reduced or repealed to the extent of at least $75,- 000,000 and probably more. »Below Is given the savings for taxpayers which will be effective under the new cuts In normal tax rates to 1%. 3 and 5 per cent, together with Increases in exemptions, the tabulation being based on the Income of a married man with two dependents: Pro ON DEBT MISSION FRENCH SUFFER TWO ^REVERSE? IN SYRIA Druses Seize Town Near Damascus-- Big Camp E9Q£r ZJL mated. MI :XLawyer Must Pay 6 Cents to the House of David Chicago.--By direction of Judge C. E. White a Jury In the Circuit court at Benton Harbor, Mich., returned a verdict of six^eents in the suit of the House of David against Attorney Jerome-^Robblns of Chicago. The plaintiffs sued for $100,000, alleging that the attorney blackmailed them. • Will Curb Dry Agent Killers W ashington.--The federal government is preparing to deny prohibition agents who kill citizens the right to trial in fe.leral courts, Brigadier L. C. Andrews, assistant secretary, of the treasury, warned on Sunday.- Ryan, Bridge Contractor, Dies New York.--Patrick J. Ryan, former Chief of police of Youngstown, Ohio, Who later became one of the biggest bridge contractors in the country, died Of heart disease. Probe Millionaire's Death Chicago.--An autopsy on the body of Francis W. Jones, sixty-six, millionaire president of the Melba Manufacturing company, who died here, was made by Coroner's Physician Irving A Porges, by order-of Coroner Wolff. Cross-Country Air Record' £ Ban Antonio, Texas--Lieut. R. J. TlUiams ot Kelly field set a new cross country aVrpUtus Bpeed record> Vhen he flew the 265 mUe* between Jpan Antonio and Dallas In eighty '^Qlnutea. Eld ridge Snow, Financier, Dies New York.--Eldrldge Gerry Snow, president of the Home Insurance company of New York and leader in financial circles and civic activities i8 dead here. . . Gross Present posed Income Tax Tax $3,500 ..$ 3.00 .... 4,000 .. 10.50 .... 4,500 ••••««•••• .. 18.00 « 2J2.1 5,000 .. 25.50 * T.87 6,000 .......... . 40.50 19.12 7,000 ... 55.50 30.87 41.62 9,000 .......... . 111.00 flO.75 10,000 . 141.00 *500 An exclusive, especially po&ed portrait of Dlno Grand!, undersecretary of state for foreign affairs and one of the members of the Italian mission now In Washington negotiating the refunding of .Italy's war debt to the United States. > - MUSSOLINI HALTS MOB SEEKING VENGEANCE Three Held in Plot to Assassinate Premier. Rome.--Premier Mussolini, who had a narrow escape from assassination, subdued a vast crowd of his followers who were determined on summary vengeance. "You mtfst obey. I wish It!" cried the premier when there were insistent shouts for revenge. And the crowd, which gave qMosso- Uni the greatest demonstration In his career, became quiet Following the discovery of a plot to slay the premier on the day In which Italy was Joining In the celebration of the allied victory in the World war, It became known that the pollct had arrested Tito Zaniboni, former Socialist deputy; Gen. Lulgl Capello, a Mason, and Gulseppe Quuglla, former secretary to Zaniboni and now editor of Popola, organ of Don Sturzo. leader of the Catholic Democratic party. The latter is known as one of the bitterest foes of Fascism. The newspaper organs of the antl- Fasclst bloc have been suppressed and all Masonic lodges have been sealed until furtlifr orders. The police declare that Zaniboni had selected a room on the level with the balcony from which the premier would speak. The police followed Zaniboni and when they seized him they said they found In his possession a sharpshooter rifle. Olcott Seriously ill, Moves to "Lucky House" New York.--Chauncey Olcott, desperately 111, is coming back to his "Lucky house," bought by his devoted wife, Itlta, who clings to the hope that in that house, 17 Sutton place, her husband's life may be saved. Mrs. Olcott wired frlen ' 'n this city from Ann Arbor: "He Is very 111, indeed, and the doctors say there Is no hope, but I shall start back home with him as soon as possible and take him to the lucky house, where, God willing, be will recover.' French Franc Is Lowest Since Big Break in 1924 New York.--Pounded down by the efforts of Frenchmen to convert their wealth into reliable currencies, the French franc sold for 3.98 % cents, which brought it slightly below the value of the Italian lira and to the lowest point It has touched since speculators drove it to 3.39 cents in March, 1924. 17. S. Tourists Aid Canada Ottawa.--American tourists brought Canada $150,000,000 In revenue in 1925. a sum equal to a quarter of the value of the dominion's wheat crop, government officials estimated. Mail Men Get Holiday Washington. -- Postmaster General New made an advance Christmas present to mall carriers and most other postal employees in the form 'of an announcement that no deliveries of ordinary mall would be made on Christmas day. Army Transport Afire San Francisco.--The army transport Somme, bound for New York with troops and passengers, was forced to put back into San Francisco by fire. Two Florida Land Firms Are Charged With Ftaud Chicago.--Two Florida land development schemes In which Chlcagoans are said to have Invested were at; tacked from different angles by dls-li satisfied purchasers. Fraud and misrepresentation were charged against officials of both companies. Promoters of Gardendale, a 77,000- acre tract In De S««to county, Florida, were made defendants In a suit filed in the Circuit court by Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Bradford. 19 South Central avenue. The Bradfords bought 50 lots in Gardendale for $1,000, they charged, and then found that the land was unfit to live on and many miles from civilization, contrary to advertisements. At the same time United States deputy marshals began seeking five of the principals In the Florida Lloyds organization and the International Lloyds on warrants charging use of the malls to defraud by the sale of lots near Gainesville, Fla. Federal action was taken following complaints by purchasers of the land. tfoMoh.--Two French reverses tn the warfare around Damascus were reported. The Druses have seized Derat, seven miles south of Damascus, and have severed communications with Damascus by means of the Haifa-Damascus railway. Mousselfrl, a large French fortified camp sooth of Suelda, In the Jebel Druse territory, has been evacuated, the French command reporting that this was necessitated by a regrouping of forces. Although the French commnnlque says that there Is nothing els* to report In Syria, Information from unofficial sources Is that the situation In Syria is growing graver, with Arabs Joining the Druse rebels, with Horns, about 80 miles north of Damascus, completely isolated and closely besieged. and with Damascus under fire *bnd In terror. The Moslem leaders are preaching a holy war against the French mandate and their soldiers are showing a reckless disregard of life. With Darqascus isolated and many of Its inhabitant? In flight, the French under General Gamelln are refraining from spectacular reprisals, but seek to continue their efforts to keep their hold in Syria under the rules of civilized warfare until the question can be taken up by the League of Nations. in a dispatch which emphasizes the seriousness of the situation around Damascus, the Cairo correspondent of the Daily Mail says the insurgent leader Ramadan Pasha Ibn Shellash has proclaimed himself military governor under a provisional government Nesslb Bey Bakry has been proclaimed civil governor. U. S. Destroyers Guard t Yanks at Beirut, Syria Washington. -- Two American destroyers, the Coghlan and the Lamson, were sent from Alexandria. Egypt, to Beirut as a precautionary measure. American Consul Paul Knabenshue cabled the State department that he had sent a message to the destroyers to proceed to Beirut, although there was no Immediate danger to Americans in Damascus or Beirut A majority of the Americans In Syria are In Beirut, where the American university has some fifty American professors and instructors, nearly all of whom have their families with them. CkUe O. K.'s Pershing Terms on Tacna-Arica Santiago, Chile.--An official communication Issued at the foreign minister's office says that Chile has accepted the motion made by Gen. John J. Pershing regarding guarantees for the holding of the plebiscite on President Coolidge's Tacna-Arlca award. The object of the guarantees Is to Insure a fair plebiscite. They Include the removal of several officials, suppression of censorship, redaction of the number of troops In the provinces of Tacna and Arlca, and removal of restrictions for entering and traveling within the plebiscite zone. Coolidge Home Brings Million Boston.--The Adijms house, home of President Coolldge while governor and famous since 1746 when It was the Lamb Tavern, has been sold for SVWO.OOQ and will be continued as a Christmas Trees Ottawa, Can.--Christmas trees enter- Jpg the United States from Canada this Jfear will pay a 10 per cent tax. They were admitted free last year Mi rough fljttcka. Iowa Turns to Busses Des Moines. Iowa.--De, Motne- Waterloo, Iowa, both face th« pect of having busses take the place of street cans. Fort Dodge has already decided to abandon street cars. Jefferson Fete Next Year New York.--The 150th anniversary' of the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the centennial of the death of Thomas Jefferson will be celebrated nationally next year, it was announced by the National Jefferson Centennial committee. Dr. S. Dickie, President Emeritus of Albion, Dies Albion, Mich.--Dr. Samuel Dickie, president emeritus and connected for almost a half century with Albion college, died suddenly at his East Erie street home here. No person has had a larger part In shaping the destinies of Albion college than Doctor Dickie. Plenty of Turkeys for Thanksgiving This Year Washington.--There will be plenty of turkeys for Thanksgiving, the Department of Agriculture said, reporting the crop only 4 per cent smaller than last year. Increased production was reported In all states except Texas, Illinois, Kansas, Oklahoma and California, with the crop In most sections hatched earlier than usual. Army and Navy Cut Personnel Washington.--Curtailments of personnel because of "lack of funds" were announced by both the army and navy. The navy cuts its strength from 84,289 to 81,700 and the ariny is ellmlvarious motor units. - Fort Dodge Cora Quit Fort Dcdge, Iowa.--Failure to meet operating expenses, which have Increased each year while earnings have decreased, has resulted in an order to abandon street car service. £ .< I !• Would Restore Lee Mansion Washington.--Major General W. H. Hart, quartermaster general of the army, has transmitted an estimate of $225,000 as the cost of restoring the I<ee mansion Arlington Motional cemetery* Three Soldiers Killed While Flying in Hawaii Honolulu.--Three enlisted men were killed when an airplane crashed. Their "names follow: Technical Sergeant Aaron Porter, Henrietta, Okla.; Staff Sergeant Henry McCracken, Wilmington, Del.; Private Fred Smith, Graham, Va. The airplane spun at an elevation of 1,000 feet and nose-dived Into a group of trees on the peninsula opposite the naval hospital at Pearl Harbor. A. B. Shaft uch, Financier, Succumbs to Heart Attack Lenox, Mass.--Albert R. Shattuck, retired, died at Ms summer villa here. He was seventy-two. He had been In 111 health since last Junerwhen he suffered a severe heart attack upon his return from Europe. The Shattucks became world famous for the relentless pursuit of a band of French criminals who robbed their New York towu bduse of valuable gems In April, 1922. Wine on King Tut's Coffin Gives Workers Hard Task Cairo, Egypt. -- Careless priests spilled funeral libations in King Tut- Ankh-Ahmen's tomb, leaving a glutinous deposit, and the 35 centuries of Interment makes It a difficult task for workers to extricate the successive sarcophugl and coffins, which, originally close fitting, are now tightly stuck together by the layers of congealed wine. New Zealand Drys Beaten Wellington, N. Z.--Prohibition Is becoming more unpopular In New Zealand. In the referendum on the question the Prohibitionists have been defeated by 20,000 votes, a majority 11,000 greater than that of 1922. Asa Chandler in Hospital Atlanta. Ga.--Asa Chandler, Sr., the ***** drink manufacturer, was removed to u hospital suffering from a stomach murder. U. S. Diplomat Weds •' t*arls.--Hoffman Philip of Claverack, N. Y., United States minister to Persia, was married to Miss Josephine Roberts, daughter of Eugene C. Roberts of Buffalo, N. Y„ In Paris. Wilson Stamp 13 Eents Washington.--Postmaster General New announced that he hoped to have a new Wilson stamp of either 13 or 17-cent denomination on sale tor the tote President's blrtbda/ Operate on Vanderbilt, Jr. Atlanta, Ga.--Cornelius Vanderbilt Jr.. newspaper publisher, was operated upon for the second time within two weeks for an Infection of the Jaw, resulting from being gassed In the World war. Greeley Rescue Survivor Dies Sallnaus, Cal.--Herbert P. de Tracy, seventy nine years old. survivor of the party which rescued the Greeley expedition from the Arctic la 1880, is dead here. ILLINOIS STATE KEIVS The late Walter M. Camp, editor of the Railway Review, bequeathed $60,- 000 to the Northwestern university department of planetary research, the will disclosed when filed for probate at Chicago. The Chicago board of education Is preparing a bill to present to the next legislature which would retire all teachers when they are seventy regardless of their health or teaching ability. Bishop Griffin of the Springfield diocese of the Catholic church announced his appointment of Rer. Amos E. Gustl, D. C. L., as vice chancellor of the diocese, Gulstl formerly was a priest In Qulncy. Mrs. May Roberts King, flfty-nlne, wife of Congressman E. J. King, died at their home in Galesburg. Death was due to a heart attack. At one time Mrs. King waa vice president of the Congressional Woman's club In Washington. Edward W. Toelpel, fifty-eight, Clinton, Iowa, former preacher and later In the bottling business, was fined $6,- 000 and sentenced to serve a year In the Morrison Jail when he pleaded guilty while a Jury waited to try him on a prohibition law violation charge. Jack Shapiro, formerly a so-called special representative of the sanitary district, and Louis Berardl, one of bis accomplices, were found guilty In Federal court at Chicago of three American Railway Express company robberies In which the loot totaled mpre than $78,000. Paved and widened, Indianapolis avenue, Chicago's only highway leading to Michigan and the East and for years one of the worst roads entering Chicago, will be opened for traffic November 19. The stretch of road which Chicago built from Ewing avenue to the state line cost $241,500. Battling for his life against great odds--a broken neck--James Powers, nineteen, University of Notre Dame freshman, lies in St Joseph hospital at South Bend in a fighting chance for recovery. Powers was . injured during. a scrimmage when he tackled Joe Prelll, varsity halfback. Arthur Schmoeller, twenty-four, Webster Grove, Mo., was killed and Hugh Sullivan, twenty-one, probably fatally Injured when they drove their automobile Into a Wabash freight at a crossing near Tolono. They were en route to Champaign for tiie Illinois-Chicago football game. Operation of the street railway 111 Qulncy is expected to be conducted at a profit Instead of a loss, due to the increase In rate of fare, authorized by the Illinois Commerce commission. The new rate is 10 cents for a single fare or five rides for 25 cents. The old rate was 7 cents or four rides for 25 cents. Parks along twenty-six miles of the lake front, with boulevards, bathing beaches, lagoons, golf courses, athletic fields and playgrounds, yacht harbors and public buildings, are an ultimate goal set for Chicago by the Chicago Plan commission in Its fifteenth annual report, which is about to be published. An "apartment hotel" was defined by Attorney General Oscar E. Carlstrom at Springfield as being a building which offers temporary accommodations to its occupants, the "temporary" meaning for periods of less than a month. An apartment building which has no accommodations" of less than a month Is not an apartment hotel, he ruled. Illinois bankers will try to wipe out breeding spots for holdups and burglaries in an effort to prevent bank robberies, Charles W. Boyden, president of the Illinois Bankers' association, told financiers of -eleven west central Illinois counties In conference at Beardstown. Cass couqty bankers, have raised the reward for dead or alive bank bandits from $1,000 to $2,- 000. The right of a railroad company to eject a passenger who boarded a wrong train when ordered not to do so, was sustained in a suit in the County court at Decatur. Edward Boyd, who boarded a train after heing told that It did not stop at Bement, where he decided to go, was ejected at the first stop. He filed suit against the railroad, demanding $5.- 000 damages. Expanding industry made further encroachments upon the ranks of the unemployed In Illinois during October. With the majority of the plants a«1d^N lng moderately to their working forces about C.000 persons were added to the payrolls of the manufacturing Industries of the state during the month says the department of labor at Springfield* The stage of Industry at the present time is such that there are 2.5 per cent more people employed in the facortles of the state than there were a year ago. The number, however, Is smaller than In October of either 1922 or 1923. All but four of the twenty-five drainage canal cases before the commission from Grundy and l<a Salle counties are the outgrowth of suits started In January, 1905, or within five years after the Increased flow of water was first sent down the canal and Into the Illinois river, says Cornelius Reardon of Morris, attorney for the claimants,- tn giving a history of the cases. Edward Franta of Los Angeles, Cal„ alleged slayer of a policeman, was arrested In Chicago In connection with the theft of $3,000 from the Bremen State bank In Tlnley Park. Sixty guards, all members *t the National Rifle association and many of them World war veterans, have been sworn in to guard Henry county banks from robbers. Failure to comply with the law which requires police rtaglstrates and constables to take an oath of office and Ale a bond disqualifies a candidate, even though he hds been elected. This was the ruling. In the case of Police Magistrate Arthur Rose of Amboy, In Lee county, announced by Attorney General Oscar E. Carlstrom at Sprlncfield. DtvtsUa WtUMNK PE-RU-NA la Hb Hon* "ja Mr. F. H. FHcke, whose address is 625 Pontiac Bldg, St. Louis, Mo, writes under the date of June 25L 1924:-- "My family and myself have had splendid results from your Pe-ru-na. We are never without it in our home. I wouldn't take a thousand dollars for what it has done for my family and myself. When * contract a cold I immediately take a dose of Pe-ru-na and get relief. I recommend Pe-ru-na everywhere." For coughs, colds, catarrh and cat a r r h a l c o n d i t i o n s g e n e r a l l y Pe-ru-na has been recognized m ft* liable for over fifty years. SoUEWHmn Tablets or Liquid 4 cnts t»THEJpE4R*4C* COMPANY catanfc. DISTEMPER. COMPOUND Bright Boy Teacher--Did you make that face at me* Jlmmle--No, ma'am. Ton Just hap» pened to walk In front of It.--Answers, Never Grows Older He feels like a boy at forty. Whenever constipation troubled Mm Bcedv am's Pills brought certain relief. "For over a year I suffered from headache* and constipation, other tanedies having failed. I told someone at my club, who suggested that I tnr Beecham's Pills. I tried them, and they relieved me. I'm only forty and I feel like a boy again after taking Beecham's Pills, "Anyone with common actiM ahouU calw- .r .m,1 for cocurtpation; biliouMMS* and sick hcadmchc." Mi. J. O., Yonktn, N. T. Tto man *<m> food «dvfc«. Follow fc, mtd m* Mw QdcUbr airrstivr ihor&tn, constipation oiuf Miowsncn an overcount by Bttcham't ftUi. FREE SAMPLE--Writ* today for free nmpl* to B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal 8»., NewYork Bay frooa your druggist In 8f and SSe bam* for Wetter Health, Take Beecham'i Pills rates tuo Write far FREE BOOKLET fervtniisc cUrv** prspali, §smm KOCNIO MEDICINE CO. |MI M. WIUJ ST* CMICAM, HA», Quick, Safe Relief CORNS In one minute--or less--the pain end*. Dr Scholl's Zino-pad 1* the safe, sure, healing treatment for corns At drug and shoe stores DlScholl's ZinO'pads Put oam oa-C/i«pai«*4sgeae Boschee's Syrup HA« WITOJ Killing Cougtis for 59 Years Carry * bottl* fat joot car and always keep It in tbahooM. SOeandMcat ALL DRCGGlSia FOR OVER ZOO YEARS haarfcm o3 has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. HAARLEM OIL ; ^ I1MIMS1LS correct internal trouble*, stimulate vital organs. Three size*. All druggists. Inaist en the original genuine GOLD B oiler Than P i l l s -- For Liver I l l s NR Toni^ht _ To mor'row Alright fHAFINGand RASHES . ^ pranptly re&ered and healed by a few applications of Resinol

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy