"V -v> ii j4J, * *,-6 w ' SLAYIN6 WIFE Say* H« Beat H«r-With a Polcsr as She Shot Hti Brother. Chicago.--Warren J. Lincoln, Aurora, lawyer, horticulturist, and distant kinsman of Abraham Lincoln, confessed that he had killed his wife, ' jLlna, and burned her body on January 11|0, 1923, at their Aurora home. He confessed also to burning the |>ody of his wife's brother, Byron (Shoup, but Insisted his wife had %4 .illled Shoup with a revolver. Then, ^ lie said, he knocked the revolver from -S* * " her hand and hit her x>*er the head $f J Itc tvlth a stove poker; V*"" He dismembered both bodies with a *. ' ' % hacksaw before burning them, he pi j ' stated, buried the ashes, and destroyed ^ ^ ;; the clothing of both, washed away the ,• „ fclood stains, and went to a picture . ahow that night. He confessed to ar- Ps^. langing the set of conditions that at j?5! / irst made It appear he had been mtir- I iered, his object being to throw suspicion on Mrs. Lincoln and Shoup, he •aid. ' From his son by his first wife, John Lincoln, aged twenty, police obtained !/Information tending to show that Lin- JIfoln had premeditated the killing and jfrlso tending to strengthen the belief that he had in fact killed both Shoup fend Mrs. Lincoln. A week before the two deaths, John '•aid, his father had directed him to ; write a letter to Ralph Shoup, Mrs. | i ^Lincoln's brother, at Mount Fulaskl, :?»;|j;|ll., telling how mean Mrs. Lincoln ~-,|'1>nd Byron Shoup were to both father The fatfier dictated the let- Maimie Sze, the attractive sixteenyear- old daughter of Minister and Madame Sze of China, who is spending the winter in" Washington with her patents at the Chinese legation. REPUBLICANS SHELVE BONUS FOR TAX BILL Caucus Orders Revision Re* ported by February 11• : ,J »n<J son. ;.i V1*- i'ter and I he wrote it, the son said. Chief -:\'„i>f Detectives Wire has the letter. ,t Lincoln, In his confession, also told \..:'>f.|n detail how he had observed with ^ - ^satisfaction the apparent police and „ '1 \ Newspaper acceptance of the theory •' ' %*hat he had been murdered on April ;?J|30. He told of traveling about the jt ; ' • •country In fancied security and of his ' - return because he needed money. ffi Family of Six Killed as lt Train Hits Their Auto Btcknell, Ind.--An entire family of •fv"^ r si* persons was killed when the auto- \ mobile in which they were riding was •7 !< struck by Chicago and Eastern Illi- 4.1.1 nols train No. 92, at a crossing near V V- here. The machine was thrown thirty -* * feet against an Iron semaphore post > and was hit a second tlm^ and carried fifty feet farther before the train was * stopped. Following are the names of the victims: Claude Whlttenmeyer, l'\"T j thirty-four; Mrs. Lnlu Van Meter Whlttenmeyer, thirty-four; Helen ft11 *Whlttenmeyer, sixteen ; Mady Whitten- J | ' , meyer, eight; Lorene Whlttenmeyer, t-j \; four; Charles David Whlttenmeyer, i "i three. DNCE DIVORCED American Heiress Repays Count's Golden Quest; He Had Many Loves. 1 m Couzens Challenges Mellon on Tax l»me Washington. -- Senator Couzens of Michigan has challenged Secretary of the Treasury Mellon to debate the secretary's plan of tax reduction and his assertion that the government Is losing large sums through the Investment of capital in tax-exempt securities. The senator says that he paid more than $7,000,000 in federal taxes In ia20. Under the Mellon plan, he said, he would have saved nearly $4,000,000 on his 1919 taxes and nearly $2,000,000 nnder the present law. *7^ Firm Gives Employees Extra Winter Vacations Boston, Mass.--The William Filene's Sons company announced that the employees are to have annual winter vacations with pay, In addition to the annual summer vacations with pay Workers who have had ten years' serv ice or more will be eligible to winter vacations of two weeks, making four week8 each year. Those who have been with the firm five years will get ode week's vacation in the winter. Washington.--Secretary Mel Ion's recommendations for Immediate downward revision of taxes won a decisive victory over the proposed bonus raid on the treasury in a caucus of Republican members of the boose of representatives. After a two-hour discussion, the party conference passed by a viva voce vote a resolution presented by Majority Leader Longworth of Ohio instructing the ways and means committee of the house to devote its time exclusively to tax revision and to report a tax bill by February. 11. It then may take up the bonus or other legislation unlnstructed. The resolution as approved provides that the committee shall proceed to the consideration of bonus legislation after February 11, but contains no definite instructions with reference to the reporting of a measure. The conference rejected a resolution put forward by the bonus supporters to commit the Republicans to the passage of both tax reduction and bonus legislation at this session of congress. The text of the Longworth resolution, as approved, was as follows: "Resolved, That it Is the sense of the Republican conference that the ways and means committee proceed to the consideration of the bill to reduce taxation, to the exclusion ot all other general legislative propositions, and shall report the same to the house on or before February 11, 1924, and thereafter shall proceed to the consideration of legislation granting adequate compensation to veterans of the World war." The victory of the administration forces by such a large majority was surprising to the bonus champions and In some' quarters it was freely predicted that the caucus action signals the doom of bonus legislation at this session. It was declared by administration leaders that the action conclusively shows the effect that the response from the country to the suggestion of tax reduction and relief from war hardens has made upon congress. New York.--Count Ludwlg Salm rata Hoogstraeten holds himself to the quarters of his bride, the former Miss Mllllcent Rogers, granddaughter of the late H. H. Rogers, one of America's money kings. Meanwhile a weird pr6- cession of former loves and heart complications began forming a line in the wake of the count's capture of thj# $40,000,000 Standard Oil heiress. ' Three women who did not go to the altar with him nursed their personal views out of range of the honeymoon and the couple upon whom It shed Its rays. ' % And with the breaking of the gentle tidings that the count had played fast and loose in love In many directions, with many counties yet to report the returns, there dame the cold blasting of his pretense to succession to the ancestral estates" of the Salm regime. Descending, as he did, from a morganatic match between Prince Constantine of Salm Salm and a plain daughter of Deutschland, he acquired nd rights, for in defining morganatic marriage the authorities agreed on thlfc point: ' "It falls to confer upon the wife the title of her. husband or upon the children the right of succession." While the light of authority thus cleared away the fond dream of ancestral estates belonging to a princely line, his friends In many quarters revealed how the forty-year-old count had come to this country with only $5,000 of capital, bent upon ^trading a Belgian count's title for a fortune that ran Into the millions class. He went about the task with the frank determination that might have won the admiration of a salesmanager for an oil promotion scheme. No cuffs to deceive you, np false pretense. He wanted u girl with a million and he said so frankly. ^ But while seeking the girl with a million he did not hesitate to engage himself to a widow de grace with a small competence. Nor did he scorn the beauteous proprietor of a hat shop, nor turn his countly gaze from a moving picture star from his own part of the world. And there are other reports still to come. Justice Sir Jojin Sankey, an important member of the English bench, who Is said to be Ramsay MacDonald's choice for the post of lord chancellor. UNITED STATES MARKET REPORT United States Public Debt Is Now $32,786,715,000 Washington.--The public debt ot the United States was more than four and three quarters times as much Vt the close of 1922 as it was in 1912, accord ing to a report of the census bureau The present debt of the entire coun try at the end of 1922 was act at $82,786,715,000. House Body Approves 2 Per Cent Limit on Immigration Washington.--Restriction of Immigration to this country on a basis of 2 per cent of the foreign citizens of each country here in 1890, with annual minimum quota of 200 for each nation, was voted by the house immigration committee in drafting a new bill. The provision In the Johnson bill providing for admission also of 2 per cent of the blood relatives of eU&en? here was stricken out. Ford's Daily Income Is ' Nearly Htdf Million New York.--Wall street, which learned tliat Henry Ford's wealth, represented by the market value of the Ford Motor company, is close to $840,- 000,000, calculated that the Fords, Henry and Edsel, are accumulating wealth at the rate of $400,000 or $450,- 000 a day, or in round numbers $100,- 000,000 a year. State Troops Quell Talk of Marion (III.) Outbreak Marion, 111.--National Guard companies from Cairo, Mount Vernon and Salem have arrived here and the situation is quiet Trouble broke out following a series of whisky raids which lasted about three weeks. The raids were conducted by federal officers accompanied by several hundred volunteer citizens, many of them admittedly members of the Ku Klux Klan. More than 200 persons have been arrested. 5 , Washington.--For the week ending Tan. ll.--LIVE STOCK--Chicago prices: Hogs, $7.45 for the top and J7.10@7.40 for the' bulk. Medium and good beef Bteers, $8.40@11.50; butcher cows and heifers, $3.50@11.00; feeder steers, $4.60' @8.00; light and medium weight veal calves, $9.50@ 12.75. Fat lambs. $12.00 @14.00; feeding lambs, $11.25@ 13.00; yearlings, $9.00@ 12.00; fat ewls, $5.25 @8.25. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES--Eastern round white potatoes, $1.85@2.00 sacked and bulk per 100 lbs., $1.55 f. o. b.; sacked northern round whites, $1.25 @1.40 in Chicago, $1.10@1.20 f. o. b.; sweet potatoes, Tennessee Nancy Halls, $2.40@2.50 in Chicago. Yellow onions, $2.50 @3.00 sacked per 100 lbs. in consuming centers. Danish cabbage, $33.00 @45.00 bulk per ton in leading markets, top of $60.00 in St. Louis, $30.00@35.00 at Wisconsin points. Texas spinach, $1.60@1.75 per bushel basket in Chicago. Midwestern Jonathan apples. $5.00 @6.00 in Chicago; northwestern extra fancy wlnesaps, $2.25 @2.50 per box in Chicago. HAY--No. 1 timothy, $2«.50 Cincinnati, $28.00 Chicago, $z5.50 St. Louis; No. 1 alfalfa, $30.00 Chicago; No. 1 prairie. $20.00 Chicago, $19.50 St. Louis. GRAIN--No. 1 hard winter wheat. $1,114; No. 2 ' hard winter wheat, $1.09St. Louis; No. 2 red winter wheat, $1.12 Chicago, $1.15@1.19 St. Louis; No. 2 yellow corn, 76%c Chicago; No. 3 yellow corn, 77 %c St. Louis; No. 3 white oats, 46%c Chicago, 47V&C St. Louis. DAIRY PRODUCTS--Butter, 92 score. 63Vic Chicago. Cheese prices at Wisconsin primary markets: Flats, 22He; single daisies, 22%c; double daisies, 22>4c; longhorns, 23ftQfe4quare prints. 28%c. Women Ask World Debt Settlements for Peace Washington.--The executive board of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom adopted a resolution urging President Coolidge to call "a conference of fche debtor and creditor nations to make definite settlement of reparations, interallied debts and disarmament, to achieve a new peace. Armed Men Kill Head of • Palatinate and 3 Others Berlin.--The Frankfurter Zeitung, reporting the assassination at Speyet of Herr Helntz, president of the autonomous government of the Rhenish palatinate, says that three other separatist leaders were shot dead In a Speyer hotel. Several persons were wounded. The shootings wee* the work of a band of armed men. Child Prodigy Grown to Mem Clerks for $23 Week New York.--William J. Sidis, son of the late Dr. Boris Sidis, has become a resident of New York, although a somewhat obscure one. At twenty-six, the boy prodigy of 1909 has become a cog In the workaday wforkl of 1924. For* $23 a week, he is working as a clerk In the statistical division of an uptown office. In 1909' young Sidis, eleven years old, delivered a lecture on the fourth dimension before Harvard professors and instructors of mathematics. At the age of two he could read and write; at seven he passed the Harvard medical school examination in anatomy; at eight, he coaTd "«peak French, Russian, English ana German. OPENS INQUIRY 7 Chicago Banker Speeds Ger- < man Quiz; Would Make i: Common Sense King, Paris.--Brushing aside formality and European diplomacy in .a. speech characteristic of both his own personality and the country he represents, Brig. Gen. Charles G. Dawes started the reparations experts' investigation on its way by stating that the crux of the question before the committee was to "hfelp Germany get well," saying : "Any common-sense indlvldnnl can estimate the distance a well man can run, but 50 medical experts gathered round the bedside of a dying patient will give 50 different estimates of how far he can run if he gets well. The reparations commission and the world, regarding the question of Germany's capacity to pay, thus far have been listening to medical experts. Let ns„ flint help Germany get wen." » Emphasizing how he and his colleague, Owen D. Young, viewed the committee, General Dawes went on to say it was not their cci^rn at the moment what Germany's capacity tp pay had been, but her "present capacity and the courage of this committee to act" General Dawes said that "all the World has seen ilie economic fife of Germany ebbing away. With it the credit of all the European allies suffers, because the world realizes that if the Germans lose their capacity for work, Germany loses her capacity *to pay reparations. "The re-establishment of German productivity is the starting point of European prosperity," he said. ' General Dawes then startled the European members of the commission by privately declaring: "I propose to work day and night witn you, and will take only half an hour for lunch--in fact, I will go without lunch If necessary. I shall expect the commission to do the same." General Dawes had not spoken more than live minutes when he reached Into his pocket and pulled out his famous briar pipe,"^vhicl» he puffed throughout the rest pf his speech. For candldness intermingled with moderation, nothing like General Dawes' opening speech had been heard In Europe since America withdrew from its affairs. The arbiter of this conference--for such he Is acknowledged by even Poincare organs here-- got right down td brass tacks. Nobody had expected such a speech. But, presiding just as he did over the budget situation in Washington, General Dawes, with the agents of every government in Europe hidden behind pillars and hanging on his words, said In reply to the usual formal European utterances of President Louis Barthou of the reparations commission that he and his associates had come here unprejudiced, not to discuss the legality of the occupation of the.Ruhr, but to suggest a plan for the stabilization of German currency and the balancing of the German budgets. S3 Convicts Surrender; Dynamite Their Weapon Montevallo. Ala.--Sixty-three convict miners tit the Aldrich irilne, who mutinied and seised the mine, cam* out and surrendered to the guards. Mine officials have not deterailned how much damage was done by the dynamite the convicts exploded in the mine. No deaths or serious Injuries were reported^ U.S. Halts All Liquor Raids in Williamson County, III. Marlon, 111.--All liquor raids in Williamson county were ordered stopped by instructions from prohibition headquarters at Chicago. The order was sent to Guy M. Wallace, United States marshal, and Vic Armltage, prohibition field agent In charge of recent raids which resulted In the capture of 265 prisoners. S. Glenn Young, a Ku Klux leader and free lance dry worker, was arrested by deputy sheriffs on charges of assault and robbery. • '« Veterans Hiss Mellon and Coolidge at Bonus Rally Chicago. -- Secretary Mellon was criticized severely at a meeting of war veterans at the Garrlck theater In be- ,half of the national bonus. President Coolidge also was the target of adverse ••"Jiglicism. 1 Kills Husband, Talis 81*#* Red Cloud, Neb.--Mrs. Ida Hammer, thirty-nine, accompanied by three of her children, walked three miles to the office of Sheriff Jack Waller and told the officer that she had killed her *l|Bsband, Arthur G. Hammer, Two Killed at "Red" Meeting. f Paris --A Communist meeting at the headquarters of the extremist labor federation to protest against the high cost of living and the occupation of the Ruhr was converted Into a riot " In which two persons were killed. s Settle Suit |t Philadelphia.--The $650,000 damage suit against Harry K. Thaw, brought by Frederick Gump, Jr., of Kansas City for an alleged whipping in a New York hotel in 1917, was settled in the law offices of William A. Grady for less than $100,00(X * 1'. Woman Hacked to Plaoes. - Bluffton, O.--The body of Mrs. Katherine Mohler, sev^pty, who disappeared several weeks ago, was found in an abandoned cistern at her home. The head, legs and arms had been severed. « 'V - Ford Buys 8cotch Cows. Edinburgh, Scotland.--Henry Forif' has purchased a herd of 103 Ayrshire cattle, which are being transported to Mr. Ford's farm at Dearborn, Mich., to insure a good milk supply for his hospital. Lottery t0 Church. ColOgrie.--Cologne's great cathedral |s being neglected because of the impoverishment of the cathedral building society and inability of its members to nise sufficient funds In the RMnelattd "'jto keep the historic building in repair . i. - Sioux Falls Bank Suspends. w. v , Sioux Falls, S. D.--The Sioux Falls rfU '-fdational bank, one of the oldest banks In the state, failed to open its doors .Jfriday. The December statement of the bank showed deposits of more than P T"1 • Charges Wheat Corner.in Franoe. Paris.--Minister of Agriculture Cheron charged an illegal conspiracy to corner the "^heat market and defraud the public. The announcement followed the failure of prices to xlrop when customs duties were reduced. Coolidges Hosts to 2,000. Washington.--The second big receptlqn of the White House social season was held Thursday night. President and Mrs. Coolidge received about 2,000 guests in honor ot Um j membec» of the Supreme COWflSf John D.'s Son-in-Law Gets Fighting Army Job Washington.--Because he wishes to serve with the fighting troops instead of in a staff corps, E. Far melee Prentice^ sixty-year-old son-in-law of John D. Rockefeller, has resigned as a colonel of ordnance lr order to become a major of JL^tojtry In the Officers' Reserve corpc ;• i . • w. Abrams Die*. San Francisco.--Dr. Albert Abrams, nationally known physician and inveator of an apparatus whereby he asserts he could diagnose a disease by testing a drop of a patient's blood, died here. Ex-Senator Alleo Diee. Norfolk, Neb.--William V. Allen, former United States senator from "Nebraska, died in a Los Angeles, Cal., hospital Saturday morning, following an operation for cancer. He was seventy- seven years old. Snowball Commissioners. Berlin.--Snowballs and jeers ed the allied military control commission as It left the Hotel Rellevue to Investigate disarmament. The police after a brief struggle dispersed the crowd. Allies Close the Fron&tr Except for Rail Business Paris.--General De Metz, the Rhineland commissioner at Speyer, says dispatch to the Echo de Paris, has closed the frontier between the Palatinate and unoccupied Germany except for railroad business and food suppiles. He has also put on the curfew. Danish King Rescues Queen in Plunge Through Ice London.--Queen Alexandria of Denmark had a ducking in the icy waters of The Sound between Sweden and Seeland, according to the Copenhagen correspondent of the Daily Mall. 'ia^A " .&•<. -,-S; ?•. MUs Campbell la "Miss America" crow whlck ska has was os two occJiImm. --Photo kr Atiaatte WmMm. • b t' *>• n . "I4-' , <• < £ »-•«< ^ jr.' J < , j**1 i.n ' • I. J Miss Mary Katherine Campbell, twice proclaimed "Miss America," has taken TANLAC and endorses it in a statement recently given to the women of America. In this statement, Miss America declares that Good Health is the basis of all Beauty, and advises women who would be beautiful to "first find good health." Her complete statement as given is as follows: "I consider it a great privilege to be able to tell the thousands of women everywhere what a great tonic TANLAC is. Health is the basis of all beauty. Without good health, one is apt to be rundown, nervous, underweight, highstrung, anemic. Indigestion drives the roses from a woman's cheeks and robs her of that radiant quality of womanhood that is real beauty. "I have taken TANLAC and I do not hesitate to say that it is S wonderful health-giving tonic. It has brought relief and good health to many women, and with good health one may have a measure of beauty that will overcome shortcomings in face and figure. "Rosy cheeks, sparkling eyes, m well-rounded figure, a lovable disposition, go hand in hand with good health. To those searching for beauty, I would say--"First of all, Find Good Health.' The TANLAC treatment has proven itself a boon to womankind, and I recommend it." Miss Camnbell has written a booklet on Health and Beauty which may be secured by filling out the coapon below. House Insurgents Win Rule Test Vote; Affects Tax Washington.--In the first test of strength in the fight to liberalize the house rules the old guard went down to defeat before a coalition of Democrats and insurgent Republicans. By a vote of 208 to 177 the house adopted an amendment offered by Representative Garrett (Dem., Tenn.), Democratic leader, repealing the so-called Underwood rule, put into effept by the Democrats ten years ago. This rule prohibited the offering of amendments on the floor to tariff and revenue bills unless they were germane to the particular section to which they were offered. ? ^ INTERNATIONAL PROPRIETARIES, INC. •y Department .W. ATLANTA, OA, ' IfMftetaMi: I herewith mcloM 10 cento (atsmpi will do), for wtiMr m ©opy of Mlaa Maijr Katharine Campbell'! Booklet qn "Beaiatr and Health." Xame .........Street. State.. A Permanent Ticket. Jnd Tunkins says marriage is a lottery, but the only kind that can keep a man in debt all his life for a ticket. "CASCARETS" FOR UVER AND BOWELS--10c A BOX Cures Biliousness, Constipation, Sick Headache,Indigestion. Drug stores. Adv. It takes a young pup in the cellar at night to jry out the acoustic properties of a^ffellar. Cole's OhrhoIIaalTe QalckJr Belter** and heals burning:. Jtehins and torturing Bkin diseases. It instantly ftops the pain of bums. Heals without scars. 30c andfiOc. Ask your druggist, or send 30o to The J. W. Cole Co., Rockford, IU., lor a paikage--- Advertisement. It's too much trouble for some men to make up their minds not to let their troubles trouble them. Facing Risks. The Young Nurse--I'm on a case Just now. M rather troublesome patient. She's in an advanced state of senility. Her Old Friend--Senility? Mercy! I should think you'd be afraid of catching it from her. DEMAND "BAYER* ASWRM Take Tablets Without Fear if You See the Safety "Bayer Cross." Warning! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets yon are not getting the* genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 23 years. Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous.--Adv. On the Way. ~-'i| Fair Lady--Is there no succor? f ! Brave Knight--Yea. !'«. cotninf.^ Awgwan. Woman Rescued From ^ Chinese Bandit Gang* Peking.--Mrs. Julina Kllen< American missionary kidnaped by bandit®! who raided Tsaoyang, Hupeh province, two weeks ago, has been rescued, ac-i! cording to advices from the Amerlcani: legation. Major Magruder, an attache Recently want to the bandlf-infeste<Jj province to demand action against the kidnapers. He said Mrs. Kilen wa^i well and the leader of the gang had been killed. - i ' | i tMr,., Gas Price Up Two Cents. Chicago.--The Standard Oil Company of Indiana raised gasoline prices two cents a gallon and kerosene one cent in 11 mid-western states. Tank\ wagon price of gasoline Is now 16 cents and filling station price 18 cents. Venezelos Beeomee Premier. Athens.--After General Danglls had failed to form a cabinet, Venizelos agreed to take charge of the government and become premier without portfolio. Georges Eoussoa will be forf'C1? minister. Charge Banker's SkiSf Stole $1,000,000 Will Pittsburgh, l a.--Charges that Glemi Stewart, son of the late - David Bl Stewart, banker, stole his father's will disposing of a $1,000,000 estate, were made here during a hearing brought to contest the will filed. It IS alleged that the will reported lost bequeathed hundreds of thousands of dollars to> charity not mentioned in the will filed. Glenn Stewart denied the charges. Charlea H. Hurlburd Die4 Chicago. -- Charles H. Hurlburd, president of the Elgin National Watch company, died at his residence, 1138 Lake Shore drive. Death came su<£ denly and unexpectedly. Mr. Hurlburd, was seventy-three years old. Puts Bounty on Bootleggers. Chattanooga, Tenn.--As the beginning of an offensive against the bootlegging fraternity, the First Baptist church of RossvlUe, Ga„ has organized a club pledged to pay reward for every offender convicted. 1800,000 Moody Church. Chicago.--Chicago is to have a new Moody tabernacle, which will be known aa the Dwight L- Moody Memorial on North avenue at Clark street. The estimated cost of the new Structure will be $800,000. ^ Two-Year-Old Babies Work. New York.--Babies, some as young as two years, work In the New York tenement district making articles for manufacturers, it was testified at a hearing betec*. SUUftvWeltete eess- •r#' 2,000,000 Ask Qrlffle' Release. Washington. -- A petition bearing 2,000,000 signatures, asking the release of Lieutenant Hoover Griffls, now lm prisoned for his part in the attempted capture of Grover C, Bergdoll, was presented to President Coolidge. Want Government Ownership. Washington.--The radicals in the senate disclosed their attitude on rail road legislation, when Senator Norrls of PJebraska introduced a bill provid Ing in effect for government ownership of the railroads. Retreat on Two Fronts. Mexico City.--Rebels are in retreat on both the western and southeastern battlefronts, according to information received here. Government officials are confident that.,th£ jnavplyxiwi Is aa aorfk- • *• v' - ' '"J-** ' -S • v4, 41* Get rid oft j constipation by interna) W Mm, Dbtaa Start from dogged Intaltnn ' • *HF-RF. is no reason why you should suffer from , 1 constipation. Headaches, biliousnesa, sleepless nights, heaviness, are nature's warning that intestinal poisons are flooding your system. If allowed to continue, you may become a .victim of serious organic., disease. ' - In constipation, say intestinal specialists, ues the ! primary cause of more than three-quarters of all ill* \ ness including the graveat diseases of life. / Laxatives Aggravate Constipation f | .«hvm and cathartics do not overcome constipation, says a noted authority, but by their continue*! use tend only to aggravate the condition and often lead to permanent injury. Why Physicians Favor Lubrication Medical science, through knowledge of the intestinal* tract gained by X-ray observation, has found af*1?- last in lubrication a means of overcoming constipation; The gentle lubricant, Nujol, penetrates and softenlii. the hard food waste and thus hastens its passage ouf|^! of the body. Thiis Nujol brings internal cleanliness* ' 'V Nujol is used in leading hospitals and is prescribed by physician*". throughout the world. Nujol is not a medicine or lantiva cannot gripe. Like pure water it is harmless. Get rid of constipation and avoid disease by adopting tlw babil i • - of internal cleanliness. Take Nujol as regularly as yon brual^y.< ^ your teeth or wash youi faco. For sale by all druggists. ass. us. (wr. orr. For Internal Cleanliness TRAD* Hwo pleasant ways to relieve a cough> Take, your choice and auitfr yoar taste. S-B--or Menthol flavor. A sure relief for coughs* colds and hoarseness. Put one ia your mouth at bedtime. Ahrmy* keep a box on hmad. KAMI I SMITH BROTHERS